What is Good?
In this blog, I explore the essence of goodness and righteousness in the context of spirituality, emphasizing the importance of being just, showing kindness, and walking humbly with God. I delve into the significance of genuine acts of kindness and the heart's attitude in doing good, ultimately highlighting the spiritual rewards of selfless generosity.
“With what shall I come before the Lord [to honor Him] and bow myself before God on high? Shall I come before Him with burnt offerings, with yearling calves? Will the Lord be delighted with thousands of rams, or with ten thousand rivers of oil? Shall I present my firstborn for my acts of rebellion, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?
He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you except to be just, and to love [and to diligently practice] kindness (compassion), and to walk humbly with your God [setting aside any overblown sense of importance or self-righteousness]?” Micah 6:6-8 Amplified
Be just. Love kindness. Walk humbly. This is what is good in the eyes of our God. To be just comes from the Hebrew word “shaphat,” meaning “to judge, pronounce sentence for or against, vindicate or punish.” In any matter in which we are called upon to judge, personally or officially, we are to be just about it, deciding what is morally right and fair. If we are to have righteous judgment, as God has, we need to look at and consider the heart of the person, the deeper issues impacting the situation that God sees.
Only God’s holy wisdom has righteous judgment in all matters and His judgment is toward redemption, not punishment without change. To love kindness is to love being merciful with others, obtaining joy in an act of kindness, being willing to do good, sympathizing with others in their life struggles and situations. It comes from the heart but also can be magnified and increased by turning our focus to every opportunity to extend kindness to another.
This is in sharp contrast to our all-too-human enjoyment of seeing another’s faults, judging by outward appearance, being harsh and critical while focusing on the negative. We are to love kindness and embrace it just as God is kind and merciful in His nature. He is able to grant us hearts of kindness as we go on our way of becoming more and more like Him.
To walk humbly is the opposite of the pride of life. This is one of the three groups of sins that satan used to tempt Jesus in the wilderness and how Paul describes fleshly ways. Some Christians seem to focus on condemning and making laws against the sins of the flesh while minimizing their own attitudes of the heart preventing them from walking humbly before God. Arrogance and pride are not pleasing to God. Even when we are right, speaking truth, in our judgment, the motives and attitudes within our hearts, we miss the mark God has set for us without kindness and mercy.
It’s not just our words but our hearts that requires purification. After all, the heart is where the mouth gets its words! All of these are heart matters, not outward behaviors. Religion has held up so many things that are good, ways to please God such as rules and traditions, acts of service, yes, even doing good works, But when they come from wrong heart motives, such as to be seen as godly, to please one’s fellowship and leaders, or to add to our income and stature, including spiritual stature, we are missing the mark.
What is good? What does God require? Many of the things religion teaches can be good when they come from a heart that is just, loving, kind and merciful, humbly following our Lord. What is good in God’s eyes is done from the right heart motive led by the holy spirit. His love makes no demands, it is not earned. Love is a freely given gift, with the intent of good given without any spoken or unspoken requirements from the other person nor expectation of visible reward from others.
“These twelve Jesus sent out, instructing them, ‘Go nowhere among the Gentiles and enter no town of the Samaritans, but go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, and proclaim as you go, saying, ‘‘the kingdom of heaven is at hand.’
Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse lepers, cast out demons. You received without paying; give without pay.’” Matthew 10-5-9 ESV
We do the good we do as the Lord leads, looking to please Father God, not to receive back. And there is a reward from the Lord for those who generously give the heart gifts of fair justice, kindness and humility:
“One gives freely, yet grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give, and only suffers want. Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered.” Proverbs 11:24-25 ESV
What if we do good to get, rather than to give, in our hearts hoping for a reward from others rather than looking to God to reward us? It is human nature to hope we will receive in like manner to what and how we have given, even if we don’t realize that expectation is part of our loving actions. But doing good in hope of receiving back from others is a natural expectation that is often unmet. It may influence another’s favorable response in kind, but there is no guarantee of reward from others.
In fact, when we do good to get something from others, God says we have our reward. When we look for a reward from man, we may receive it or not, but God rewards the humble with the jewels of His nature. Would we rather have a human being’s mercy than God’s loving kindness towards us? He sees the heart and knows what we do in secret. It’s about what God considers good, not what humans value or take notice about what we do.
“But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right-hand doeth: that thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly.” Matthew 6:3-4 KJV
The rewards God provides are the highest, most valuable, and only lasting rewards there are: spiritual ones! There are many Christians who do much good, all the time, by the spirit and with sincere hearts, yet are unknown, unnoticed by others. Those they bless may not even know it comes from the, stems from their kind godly hearts. Their motives are pure, and they are serving God, not man, in the doing.
God sees all who give in secret, including secret kindness and compassion. He rewards each with more of His kingdom jewels of peace, love, and joy. This is the lasting reward of inner character, most pleasing to God. The accolades of men are fleeting, but God sees the heart and rewards accordingly. Such saints are living this word Paul spoke to the Ephesians and John in his gospel:
“Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.” Ephesians 4:32 ESV
“Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one's life for one's friends.” John 15:13 ESV
Forgiveness is freely extended to all through our Lord Jesus Christ. We give others kindness, submitting our hearts to the Lord to remain tender toward others, forgiving them as we are forgiven. Our forgiveness is without condition. We do not earn it nor can we. Only what Jesus Christ has done for us makes the way to the Father. It is freely given to us and we freely give it to others.
Thus, our forgiveness does not demand an acknowledgement of the other’s wrongdoing nor evidence that it has been received. It is a gift God gives to us so we are not bound by resentment or bitterness, kept in a prison within. We do not demand the other agree with our assessment of the harm done or their responsibility in it. It is a free gift we give as unto the Lord, just as He freely forgives us without reservation.
If this principle was lived by in every Christian home, what a change in relationships would be seen! It pleases God when we sacrifice by sharing what we have, whether it be little or a lot, words or possessions, time or other gifts freely given. We lay down our lives—what we have, what we want, what will bless us—for our friends.
“Give to everyone who begs from you, and from one who takes away your goods do not demand them back.” Luke 6:30 ESV
I want to share a small example. Several years ago, my husband lived out this last passage much better than I did. He planted, pruned, and nurtured a pear tree in our backyard, by the street, bordering our neighborhood’s walking and bike path. Every fall, we enjoy tree-picked fresh pears as well as giving many to others. That year, it was a bumper crop, with ripening pears hanging heavy on the branches.
One day we got up, looked out, and saw that our pears were all gone! Every single one had been stripped from the tree. One of our neighbors later told us that, on an early walk, they saw someone drive up, take out a ladder and a bucket, and proceed to take all of the pears from our tree.
Well, I was righteously indignant. The audacity! The greediness! I could not believe someone would do that. I certainly never would do such a thing! They were probably going to sell them at a market. Our pears! We were waiting for them to ripen before we had any. Not one taste of our pears was left. No pears to enjoy or freeze for pear crisps.
I wanted to put up a sign for next year, saying, “Private property. Taking pears from this tree is stealing!” My husband, the gardener who had done all the labor to produce such abundance, was not in favor of such an action. He had a holy and humbling response: “Maybe they needed them more than we do.”
I had never thought of that in my automatic response about my rights. That surely convicted me right on the spot, though that was not his intention. It came from his generous heart. Freely he had been given pears from the bounty of the earth. He was neither possessive nor stingy with that crop.
Pears are a small thing, not required for our existence. But if I have that attitude of heart about the small things, what about other ways people steal the crops that I grow? There are other, more vital, things that necessitate a better response that is consistent with God’s nature. The people of God, from the beginning, are held to a different standard regarding others’ needs, particularly those in poverty.
The Israelites were taught to be generous and giving, most especially with their brothers and sisters in the camp:
“There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your fellow Israelites who are poor and needy in your land.” Deuteronomy 15:11 ESV
We are to be open-handed, not stingy or regulating what others may receive. There was no concept of the deserving vs. undeserving poor as we see operationalized in many laws and rules of the land. These are often made even more restrictive, to ensure those receiving assistance in their poverty actually need it. Instead of making systemic changes that pave the way for all to be free to earn a living, individual restrictions increase for those in poverty, to prevent them from getting more than they should.
It is even said by some that we don’t have poverty in our greatly blessed country because they don’t see it, yet there continues to be an appalling and grievous number of children here in the US who live homeless, are food-deprived, and go hungry on a daily basis. Am I advocating for allowing anyone to take the money and resources others have earned? No, that’s not the point. I am concerned with the attitudes of our hearts in doing good in God’s eyes.
The comfort of our own blessings may blind us to the needs of others. It’s easy to be generous when one has a lot. It’s also common for those who have not suffered lack in any great way to remain unaware of the struggles and limitations of those who do. It’s easy to pride ourselves in what we have achieved without recognizing our own many unearned and unrecognized advantages, such as where we were born, our God-given natural gifts and talents, the nurturing for success by one’s family, all of which open doors to choices others do not have because of the many societal barriers in their way.
Sometimes it is the wealthy who came from great poverty that are condemning of others who live in poverty. The heart attitude here is one of “Well I got out of poverty by hard work and so should everyone else.” It is difficult, however, to apply one’s own achievement to others lives about which we know little about, including their unique circumstances and challenges. But isn’t this exactly what we do, far to often, in our plans and programs to assist others, often without any education or input from those actually experiencing living in poverty?
Life is challenging for families who do not have their needs met except by others who do not understand how they got there nor what they need to move out of poverty. God said:
“We who are strong ought to bear with the failings of the weak and not to please ourselves.” Romans 15:1 ESV
“For you have been a stronghold to the poor, a stronghold to the needy in his distress, a shelter from the storm and a shade from the heat; for the breath of the ruthless is like a storm against a wall.” Isaiah 25:4 ESV
Our national and international governments often demonstrate the breath of the ruthless, lacking compassion for the needy. As believers endeavor to be like Father God, yielding our hardened hearts to the holy spirit, we are to be a stronghold to those who are poor, needy, in distress, caught in the storms and heat of daily life challenges. God sees when ruthlessness is in our hearts, tainting the good that we might do.
Yes, this Old testament prophet does say to be openhanded with other Israelites, their brothers and sisters in God’s eyes. When Jesus, came, however, He broadened the directive to give to all others, to the least of them:
“They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’ He will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’” Matthew 25:44-45 ESV
“And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.” Hebrews 13:16 ESV
When what we do is as unto the Lord, He does not see it as done—or not done—to people, but to Him. It matters to the Lord not only what we do, but the motive in our hearts in the doing. God sees a generous heart and is pleased. Is that not the whole point of our Christian walk, to please the Lord? Only He can change our hearts to be without guile, to give freely and lovingly, in kindness sharing what abundance we have, and, more so, when we share what little we have with others in need.
“Jesus sat down opposite the place [in the temple] where the offerings were put and watched the crowd putting their money into the temple treasury. Many rich people threw in large amounts. But a poor widow came and put in two very small copper coins, worth only a few cents.
Calling his disciples to him, Jesus said, ‘Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything—all she had to live on.’” Mark 12:41-44 NIV
Then there arises a question with which I have personally struggled before the Lord. How much is enough? How much giving of our wealth and resources is sufficient when there is critical need all around us? Are we all called to give everything away and live in poverty with those in need? With all the information on the suffering around the world, let alone in our own neighborhood, where does the giving end?
No one is able to answer that except the Lord God Himself for each of us. We must be led by the spirit in all things, to please God with what is good in His eyes, generously and freely giving as God prompts us to do so. Jesus did not minister to all who came His way. He saw many in need, walking among the rich and the poor without condemnation. He only did what the Father showed Him.
His judgment, however, was severely aimed at the motives and attitudes of the exalted religious leaders of the time. They loved the honor of men and laid heavy burdens on others while not applying them to their own lives. Is this not happening yet today? It’s easy for me to say I am not ambitious for material wealth when all my needs are met and I have enough for the future.
Perspective is radically changed, however, for areas in which we experience lack and deprivation. What is good? What does God require of us, in our own hearts before the Lord? Consider the great prophet Isaiah‘s words as he chastised the leaders of the land for fasting to get rather than to give, to look holy in the eyes of others:
“Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen: to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every yoke? Is it not to share your food with the hungry and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter—when you see the naked, to clothe them, and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?…
If you do away with the yoke of oppression, with the pointing finger and malicious talk, and if you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed, then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like the noonday.” Isaiah 5:6-7; 10-11 NIV
Once again, God is dealing with what is in our fleshly hearts. It is so easy to point the finger at another, whether it is judging those in poverty or criticizing the rich in how they handle their wealth. There is a blessing from God who sees the hearts of all and rewards those who do not participate in oppressing others. This includes the judgmental talking about and condemning of others when we have not had to walk the same paths.
God counts on His own to give what they have:
“Now Peter and John went up together into the temple at the hour of prayer, being the ninth hour. And a certain man lame from his mother's womb was carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful, to ask alms of them that entered into the temple; Who seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple asked an alms.
And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, ‘Look on us’. And he gave heed unto them, expecting to receive something of them. Then Peter said, ‘Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk.’
And he took him by the right hand, and lifted him up: and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength. And he leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking, and leaping, and praising God.” Acts 3:1-8 KJV
Peter said, “Such as I have I give thee.” This man only knew to ask for alms, but Peter and John gave this man the ability to walk, something he had never been able to do. When we faithfully walk with our Lord, He shows us what and when to give to those who have not, to take action on behalf of those who are oppressed and carrying heavy burdens. Then our light shines in the darkness and others will see the Christ in us.
What is good? God shows us what is good and just as we walk humbly before Him.
Is God Unfair?
Here, we talk about the perception of God's plan and purpose, exploring the idea that it may appear unfair to humans. I delve into the concept of God's calling and election, emphasizing that different callings and ranks exist, and it is God's choice whom He calls.
“The Lord frustrates the plans of the nations; He thwarts the devices of the peoples. The counsel of the Lord stands forever, the purposes of His heart to all generations. Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord, the people He has chosen as His inheritance!
The Lord looks down from heaven; He sees all the sons of men. From His dwelling place He gazes on all who inhabit the earth. He shapes the hearts of each; He considers all their works.” Psalms 33:10-15 Berean
Ever get tired of doing the right thing when others around you do not? God’s plan and purpose often seem unfair in the eyes of us humans. Certainly suffering in this world is unequally distributed among the people of the earth. Further, not all in this life are drawn to the Father through it, enabled to comprehend the depths of His nature and wisdom. For example, Jesus told His disciples that it was given to them to understand the kingdom, but it wasn’t given to those outside their group, much less those not of the Jewish community.
Jesus chose twelve men whom He wanted to minister and teach more deeply than the crowds of people who followed Him for a time. Is this unfair prejudice from our Lord and Savior? Jesus had His inner circle sitting at His feet, close to Him. Jesus even had special times with just a few, like Peter, James and John. Think about this. Many a believer today would be loudly objecting to what appears to be exclusivity, a division of those who were good enough to be chosen and those seemingly less worthy.
Yet this cannot be true in the heart of Jesus, Who only did what Father God showed Him, loves all and is no respecter of persons.
“For there is no respect of persons with God.” Romans 2:11 KJV.
God knows no partiality in His love and mercy. So, how shall we understand and be like the Lord in this? Consider the purpose and plan God has for each person, knowing He will have favor on those He chooses. It is His business whom He calls. Many are called who go on to become chosen, and then faithfully continue to their calling.
“Then he said to his servants, ‘The wedding banquet is ready, but those I invited were not worthy. Go therefore to the crossroads and invite to the banquet as many as you can find.’ So the servants went out into the streets and gathered everyone they could find, both evil and good, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.
But when the king came in to see the guests, he spotted a man who was not dressed in wedding clothes. ‘Friend,’ he asked, ‘how did you get in here without wedding clothes?’ But the man was speechless. Then the king told the servants, ‘Tie him hand and foot, and throw him into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
For many are called, but few are chosen.’” Matthew 22:8-14 Berean
While His love extends to all without partiality, we are to make our calling and election sure. He has different ranks, different callings, and differing eras of His plan that in no way come from the better than/less than mentality of humans about such things. Did He not say, “In my house, I have many mansions,” many dwelling places for various ones by His choosing?
“For the Scripture says to Pharaoh: ‘I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display My power in you, and that My name might be proclaimed in all the earth.’ Therefore God has mercy on whom He wants to have mercy, and He hardens whom He wants to harden.
One of you will say to me, ‘Then why does God still find fault? For who can resist His will?’
But who are you, O man, to talk back to God? Shall what is formed say to Him who formed it, ‘Why did You make me like this?’ Does not the potter have the right to make from the same lump of clay one vessel for special occasions and another for common use?” Romans 9:17-21 Berean
The idea of unfairness is a human concern, and Jesus experienced this life challenge throughout His earthly ministry. He absolutely had many unfair things happen to Him that He might have complained about, but He knew better and trusted His Father. God’s calling and election is sure. We must accept our lot because the Potter has the right to form us as He chooses. It is only our own fearful human hearts that see another’s calling and believe it is a negative reflection of our own status and position.
Our callings differ, just as our paths do. Differentness is not badness, nor is it a sign of one being better or less than another. When we are envious of how another believer is used by the Lord, we need to consider how much is required for many used in His ministry. When others suffer, we need not assume that it is punishment from Him. God has a path and purpose for each. When we are in the center of His will for us, we are able to be satisfied and content.
Calling is translated invitation from the Greek. All were invited to the wedding feast in Jesus’ parable, but not all came and at least one that did was without a wedding garment. This guest came unprepared, not clothed with the pure nature of Christ, described as a gown of white linen in Revelation. Many are called and, like Paul, are determined to go higher, as far as God would have but God is in charge of the invitations and the callings!
While we admire another’s gifts and callings, would we really want to have what they have if we knew the price they paid to get it? When I first heard my future husband ministering God’s word during a meeting of the saints, I recognized the powerful word Rich had and wished I had something similar. God told me, “My child, would you want to go through what he has to get it?” I did not know what Rich had gone through and still only God knows it all.
This is another way we Christians can unwisely judge by outer circumstances. We see the results of God’s hand on another without knowledge of the tests and purging that brought about that gold we so admire and even covet. Jesus told His disciples:
“The servant who knows the master’s will and does not get ready or does not do what the master wants will be beaten with many blows. But the one who does not know and does things deserving punishment will be beaten with few blows.
From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.” Luke 12:47-48 NIV
We are held accountable by God for what we know spiritually. When we know but do it not, that is sin. Are we to revel in any superior knowledge, holding it over others as if we, ourselves, gained it rather than it being of God’s choosing? Would God allow any son He called to enter into His highest calling, to be among the kingdom priests destined to change the world, to rule and reign with Him, if that person had one speck of “I’m better than, superior to, closer to God, more in the know, than you?”
In Revelation, we see just how significant those qualifying for the highest calling are. These are meant to be priest-kings who are the servants of all. When the enemy of God’s people makes war against the saints, Jesus and all those who have qualified go to war spiritually, together:
“They will make war against the Lamb, and the Lamb will triumph over them, because He is Lord of lords and King of kings; and He will be accompanied by His called and chosen and faithful ones.” Revelation 17:14 Berean
Jesus clearly said that the mark of a son is to be a servant to all. To minister is to serve, not to rule over the people. Kingdom authority is granted to those who have overcome all within them so that only the Christ within rules. That is the qualification, the price to pay for further steps in God. Paul called the high calling a prize, something that is earned. It is not a free gift.
Those who are called, chosen and remain faithful must be refined into wise and loving servants of God’s own precious people. That’s the price of this prize for which we run this race! This is not a calling to be grasped at nor demanded. Like it or not, it is God’s choice who is called to this order in Him. Some who have the knowledge of this sonship message have filtered it through their soulish realm, letting the pride of life draw them to a better-than attitude amidst self-congratulatory proclamations of their own sonship.
No wonder their listeners resist this message or even search for a way to deny it when they see such fleshly behavior revealing soulish arrogance. It behooves anyone called to spiritual leadership to learn humility. God will teach it to you, willing or not, as part of your calling. God never promised equality of position or to fairly match the callings amongst us, but He certainly desires us to be like Him.
We are to be confirmed into His image and likeness. This includes us becoming no respecter of persons, honoring all parts of the Body as necessary for the operation of all, love and peace toward all men, even our enemies, preferring others over ourselves and our needs. I like how The Message says it:
“But I also want you to think about how this keeps your significance from getting blown up into self-importance. For no matter how significant you are, it is only because of what you are a part of. An enormous eye or a gigantic hand wouldn’t be a body, but a monster.
What we have is one body with many parts, each its proper size and in its proper place. No part is important on its own. Can you imagine Eye telling Hand, ‘Get lost; I don’t need you’? Or, Head telling Foot, ‘You’re fired; your job has been phased out’?
As a matter of fact, in practice it works the other way—the ‘lower’ the part, the more basic, and therefore necessary. You can live without an eye, for instance, but not without a stomach. When it’s a part of your own body you are concerned with, it makes no difference whether the part is visible or clothed, higher or lower. You give it dignity and honor just as it is, without comparisons.
If anything, you have more concern for the lower parts than the higher. If you had to choose, wouldn’t you prefer good digestion to full-bodied hair? The way God designed our bodies is a model for understanding our lives together as a church: every part dependent on every other part, the parts we mention and the parts we don’t, the parts we see and the parts we don’t.
If one part hurts, every other part is involved in the hurt, and in the healing. If one part flourishes, every other part enters into the exuberance.” 1 Corinthians 12:19-26 The Message (MSG)
How clear this is, setting a standard for how we are to regard one another in our differing requirements and callings! Without these characteristics of the Lord’s nature, we Christians may appear holy and righteous while our hearts are not yet purified by fire. Consequently, very little real kingdom fruit is produced.
It is hard to leave the pleasant places we have so loved spiritually whether they end suddenly or gradually dry up. We, His people, have often become comfortable, settling on a lower, familiar plane that is less than our full inheritance. Our Father, in His wisdom, allows the discomfort of a thorn in the flesh to move us on. If we don’t move, He moves on anyway while we remain in our comfortable place of our former learning, our past rituals and traditions.
We then miss His new beginnings unfolding in this third thousand-year Day when all things are being made new. Early on the third day, He arose! Jesus Christ is alive and ruling in the heavens with our Father, soon to rule the earth also, because God is tabernacling in His people. This third day is the Feast of Tabernacles, the celebration of harvest, now upon us. It’s time for reapers to gather what God has sown in the hearts of His people.
“And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap if we faint not.” Galatians 6:9 KJV
What are we reaping? Why, the fruit of the kingdom, the full character of Christ Who descends with a shout. God’s called, chosen, and faithful wait with patient endurance, along with the saints in spiritual Zion, for the full redemption to be completed as promised. Two thousand years of the church age have passed, and the third day, the new day, the Day of the Lord, is now shining upon us. Now Jesus and His Father come to be within us, to dine with His own.
He has prepared a great Feast for all:
“And Yahweh of hosts makes for all peoples, in this mountain, a feast of oils, a feast of lees, of oils from marrows, of filtered lees. And He swallows up on this mountain the face wrap wrapped over all the peoples, and the blanket blanketing all the nations. He swallows up death permanently.
And my Lord Yahweh will wipe every tear off of all faces, and the reproach of His people will He take away off all the earth, for the mouth of Yahweh speaks. And they will say in that day, ‘Behold! This is Yahweh, our Elohim. We expected Him, and He will save us! This is Yahweh! We expected Him, and we will exult!’” Isaiah 25:6-9 Concordant Literal
Hear the word of the prophet: all people, all nations will be able to see Him. This has not yet happened, but it is foretold by Isaiah and confirmed in Revelation. There are no nations in heaven, only nations on the earth. He will wipe away tears from every face. There are no tears in heaven to wipe away. We have tears and sorrows here, on this earth. The disgrace of our sinful nature is ruling, evident in the earth, not in heaven.
These promises for the ages to come are clearly for us on the earth wherein we dwell, as God fulfills His plan here within His own. We have every right to hope in this promise even if He does not fulfill it on this earth until we are gone. He is descending with a shout, returning within a people, wherein His kingdom is found. Though it takes ages, He will do so because He said so! Sin is missing the mark, but you need to know what the mark is!
It is sad that we, His people, have never been able to fully become what He created us to be. We all fall short of showing forth the Christ nature within us. Without the Lord bringing the mind of Christ, the fullness of all He has done for us, into each person’s heart, we continually fall short of His glory. But He promised to take our ways that continue to produce death away, wiping away anything that causes tears—and this is for every face! This is the great Hope and Promise of our God.
Jesus Christ our Lord will not stop until He has returned all to His Father and we are together in the Lord. Some will consider His plan unfair after all they’ve done for God. Why do the last become first? Why is God allowing their work, their ministry to come to an end, to be burned up into stubble and waste? Why can’t things continue as they have been, with prosperity and honor in the eyes of others? Many wonder how satan’s power and authority have caused all these woes and begin to question God about it.
When you absolutely know that your life is in God’s hands, no human can take from you what God wants you to have nor bless you in anything that God has not destined for you. God has brought many powerful ministries to an end when their season is over. It’s better to surrender than to hold on in vain when God has moved on. God brings works and ministries to a close, firmly closing some doors in our faces when we serve Him with a willing surrender.
There are seasons for certain things, times of ministry and fellowship that come and go. There are ages in God, one closing out when another begins. The more quickly we recognize and surrender to the truth that it is God whom we serve Who is bringing about an end to something, rather than satan attacking our ministry, the easier our walk becomes.
Here is the way of peace, the maturity of obedience. In God, endings are new beginnings for those who love and serve Him. We can stand upon that! But there are multiple reasons why we cling to what God is ending. Often it’s because we do not think it is Him—we do not see our Teacher! Those who continue to eat the fruit of the Tree of Good and Evil see all good things as from God and all evil from satan.
Study the word, however, and you quickly see that this is not the way of it. Without the holy spirit, such study is not enlightening. With the holy spirit, God reveals that his thoughts and ways are different from our human understandings:
“‘For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,’ declares the Lord. As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” Jeremiah 55:8-9 NIV
As Job said when God chastised him for his complaints, we often speak of things too high for us. Yet God promised He would reveal his treasures to those who love Him and are called for His purposes. Paul spoke of this to the Corinthians, quoting from the Old Testament:
“Rather, as it is written: ‘No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no heart has imagined, what God has prepared for those who love Him.’ But God has revealed it to us by the Spirit.
The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God. For who among men knows the thoughts of man except his own spirit within him? So too, no one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God.
We have not received the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we may understand what God has freely given us. And this is what we speak, not in words taught us by human wisdom, but in words taught by the Spirit, expressing spiritual truths in spiritual words.
The natural man does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God. For they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned.
The spiritual man judges all things, but he himself is not subject to anyone’s judgment. For who has known the mind of the Lord, so as to instruct Him? But we have the mind of Christ.” 1 Corinthians 2:9-16 Berean
What a powerful scriptural passage! Do we want to know God, even His very heart? We long to get past God’s actions that we can see to truly understand His ways, as He showed His faithful servant, Moses:
“He made known His ways to Moses, His deeds to the people of Israel.” Psalms 103:7 Berean
Moses came to know God intimately and was a Friend of God. He had to know God deeply and well, in order to fulfill God’s calling to lead His people, the Israelites, out of bondage. There were Israelites who envied Moses without understanding the weight of responsibility and, yes, the grief of their continual rebellion that Moses often carried. The leadership of a people is an incredible gift as well as a weight only to be carried by the Lord within.
Moses even dared to disagree with God, advocating for the people when God wanted to destroy them all. He also told God about his frustration and distress concerning these rebellious folk he had to lead. He destroyed the 10 commandments wrought in stone that God had given him on the mountaintop, angry and devastated that in his absence and on Aaron’s watch, the people had created a false idol, a calf to worship.
Yet Moses still interceded for the people he had loved and was serving as leader. Read about it in the book and you will see that many of God’s saints were intimately acquainted with Him and endlessly real in their conversations. Nothing is hidden from the Lord, so why not bring our struggles, our questions and doubts, to Him rather than avoiding or running away?
When we struggle with the portion God has given us, either wanting more or wishing for less, when we consider His acts as unfair, God is not surprised. Our Lord is never caught unprepared to respond, though it does matter how we approach Him and what our hearts are prepared to receive in understanding His ways. God said some would not approach him correctly—in the spirit—because they use fleshly ways and human understanding to approach a spiritual God.
There is more of the fiery presence coming to such as these and that’s a good thing! God is spirit and we must learn to understand His ways by the spirit, higher than human ways. His plans and designs differ from what we’d design with our human understanding .Then we come to worship Him in the way that pleases Him:
“But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship him. God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.” John 4:24 KJV
If we do not learn this lesson, truly coming to know God, desiring to understanding more of His ways, including those that seem unfair to our human eyes, we miss out on a great deal of peace and rest. We can have faith even though we lack understanding of all His ways, as we continue to seek Him above all. Or we can waste our religious energy on works when God looks at the heart.
We can continue to wonder why we do not obtain mercy while being reluctant to offer mercy and compassion to others. We can rebuke the devil all day long without turning our focus to God and asking what He is teaching us through it all. There are multiple lessons brought to us by Father God, as He teaches His sons and daughters to follow Him alone. When you read the Old and New Testaments, seeking truly for spiritual understanding, it is impossible to sustain some of these false beliefs about God and His word.
How long will we be distracted by outward appearance, judging by what we see rather than learning God’s way of looking at the heart? When will we see as God sees, understanding more of His ways? When will we fully surrender because He is God and we are not?
God help us all!
The Fires of Change
Here, we talk about the transformative spiritual journey of believers, stressing that genuine growth in faith involves a continual process of heart change, deeper worship, and service to God, leading to a more Christ-like nature. I discuss the necessity of embracing God's refining process through trials and transitions, encouraging believers to trust in God's guidance and to seek spiritual maturity by overcoming past habits and embracing new challenges with faith and devotion.
When we fully commit to walking with our Lord, we are committing to a spiritual process of growth. We believers should be seeing change in our hearts, our walk, our worship, and our service to God. If you are still doing the same things in the same way or reserving God for certain times or gatherings, you are not growing up into Him.The more we know Him, the more we love Him and want to be like Him. He is the changer of our hearts Who brings the evidence of Him, alive within, into visibility.
The fires of change brought by God’s presence consume our dross. As God is a consuming fire within us, He is changing our form into His nature. To burn in the natural world means to change, bringing a different form. Fire does not destroy but changes the form. God is changing our fleshly form, our carnal man, into His likeness and nature—a new form! Jesus brought in a new covenant of being, not of doing!
When we read the New Testament, it is full of what and how we are to progress into Him. Much of God’s refining is as the Old Testament says, here a little, there a little. We need God to make us new, to be enabled to shed old habits and behaviors, including religious ways that lack the power of the holy spirit to bring about change. Jesus Christ did it all on the cross, where we lay our burdens down.
Now we are learning to walk in or apprehend all that He accomplished, to witness the Christ within develop us unto maturity. God is more than able to do all that we cannot do to create us anew, to become whole. The hardest period in major change is moving from the old to the new. Times of transition can be unsettling as they take us from the familiar to something new or different from what we’ve had or been.
But—we need to be willing to leave our comfortable, familiar places, even those dwelling places in God we’ve enjoyed and prospered within while there. Sooner or later, He tells us to go further, keep growing, rise up into those higher places in the spirit. God’s truth is that He always makes a way for us to go through:
“...No trial has taken you except what is human. Now, faithful is God, Who will not be leaving you to be tried above what you are able, but, together with the trial, will make the sequel [escape] also, to enable you to undergo it. “ 1 Corinthians 10:13 Concordant Literal
This translation uses trial rather than temptation, as most other translations do, giving a more accurate understand of the meaning of this passage. Temptation connotes something we want that we should not have or do. Trials, however, are tests, with the core temptation centering around our attitudes during the test. Are we tempted to give up, get upset, resist, complain, lose hope, indulge in self pity, question our faith? Will it be our nature and character or that of the Christ that becomes visible?
Trials bring significant change to our lives and are an inevitable part of life on earth. We are all tried in our faith, just as Jesus was in His while on this earth. Our way of escape requires us to come up hither in the spirit, to see as He sees, to have His mind operating. He always knows the end from the beginning, providing His strength and comfort through difficult times.
There is much remaining to learn and explore with our eternal Father. He spoke to John the Revelator about just such things for our time in God now:
“After this, I looked, and, behold, a door was opened in heaven: and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me; which said, ‘Come up hither, and I will shew thee things which must be hereafter.’” Revelation 4:1 KJV
We have to leave what we have known to continue to build upon that sure foundation He has established. How can God build a holy habitation in us if we only know about the foundation? There must be walls of salvation and pillars holding up this house not made with hands that Abraham longed for.
As we trust and praise Him in each difficult situation, He refines the attitudes of our hearts, freeing us through the application of His Holy Spirit. He faithfully writes present truth on the fleshly tables of our hearts. He tears down our refuge of lies so we live in true freedom in Him. He is faithful to continue conquering our fleshly ways that cannot enter in to the kingdom, that carnal mind that cannot be trusted.
We are His temple and, as He tabernacles in us, we are enabled to forget the past.Each of Jacob’s sons became the 12 tribes of Israel, and their names bear significance in our path to maturity. Manasseh means to forget, foreshadowing Paul’s directive in the New Testament to forget the past:
“Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize of God’s heavenly calling in Christ Jesus.” Philippians 3:13-14 Berean
We Christians can’t seem to agree on much but we probably can agree that we have yet to arrive at the full prize God has promised. We have yet to visibly see the Christ fully displayed in His followers. Meanwhile, the testimony of those who survive fiery trials meant for evil reveal our Lord, the God of the universe, in most holy ways. When others witness Christians going through fiery trials, eventually emerging victorious in Him, they realize only God could accomplish such things in human beings!
We emerge from the fires of our afflictions with our fleshly nature purified into the gold of God’s nature.
“Behold, I will send My messenger, who will prepare the way before Me. Then the Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to His temple—the Messenger of the covenant, in whom you delight—see, He is coming,” says the Lord of Hosts.‘
But who can endure the day of His coming? And who can stand when He appears? For He will be like a refiner’s fire, like a launderer’s soap. And He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver; He will purify the sons of Levi and refine them like gold and silver. Then they will present offerings to the Lord in righteousness.” Malachi 3:1-3 Berean
Consider what is said here. He is coming to His temple, suddenly, after we have waited and waited for Him. We are His temple and the Kingdom of God is within, just as Jesus says in the gospels. The kingdom is not external to us. It is within us, where He sits as a refining fire. It is God with whom we have to deal. It is our loving Father Who allows events and experiences that try our flesh in this world.
Mature Christians embrace the refining process of God, these fiery trials He uses as His tools to bring about the change we so desire and need to be righteous.
“Therefore, since we are receiving an unshakable kingdom, let us be filled with gratitude, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe.
For our God is a consuming fire.” Hebrews 12:28-29 Berean
None of us, in our flesh, can endure the day of His coming. None of us are able to stand when He appears within us. He is that fire that consumes our dross—our mind, will, and emotions. He purifies this soul realm so that His spirit can fully rule and reign within us. God is about the business of creating within us more of His character.
The Lord Himself comes to judge us and we, His people, are the first to be judged. Malachi states that God will sit, not just visit, for this refining process. He may take us away, hide us in the wilderness as He did Jesus, so others cannot see what He is doing, or we may be exposed if necessary according to His plan.
Is this not the judgment of God beginning in His house? We are His house, He said so. His return to sit in our house brings judgment, often from the fires of change through suffering, just as Jesus Christ was perfected. What is He doing sitting within us, His temple? Why, He is cleaning us up just like the refiner of gold and silver used fire to burn out the impurities of these precious metals in Biblical days.
A refiner’s fire must be extremely hot in order to eliminate all the impurities in gold and silver. The process of fire causes all that is not pure gold to rise to the surface to be eliminated. By God describing His process as like the refiner’s fire, we are to understand His very coming as judgment in us for our good. His purpose is to continually cleanse us from the fleshly impurities that mar the beautiful gold of His nature within, meant to shine out to others.
Fleshly things within us must be exposed, rising to the surface of awareness, in order for true change to occur. Anything that is not Him, anything that is anti-Christ, known or unknown within us, is yielded to His fiery presence, consumed up by the Lord’s presence within us. There is nothing like adversity to show forth our true nature, which the Lord burns away when revealed and yielded to Him.
Just in case we don’t get the message Malachi delivers, the prophet adds like a launderer’s soap. Launderer’s soap is strong and harsh, to make white these garments that are spotted with our fleshly lives. He is sitting within us to clean our hearts up, inside, where all the trouble and sin begins. We often do not really know what is in our hearts until the Lord reveals it to us through our challenging life experiences.
God has been and continues to refine those who serve Him until we shine as lights in the darkness. Peter said:
“The end of all things is near. Therefore be clear-minded and sober, so that you can pray. Above all, love one another deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins…
Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial that has come upon you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice that you share in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed at the revelation of His glory…
For it is time for judgment to begin with the family of God; and if it begins with us, what will the outcome be for those who disobey the gospel of God? ” 1 Peter 4:7;12-13;17 Berean
First, Peter says the end of all things is near. For centuries Christians have thought, hoped, prayed for, and even predicted that the end of all things is near within our time frame. We long for the end of all things to be close to completion, when the sons of God manifest the fullness of Christ! While we realize it was not near in years for Peter, the end of all things was as near within Peter then as He is near to us now.
Peter well knew that Jesus Christ had come to change everything! He is in our hearts as soon as we accept the truth of His death and resurrection. Jesus Christ our Lord came to save us to the uttermost. Peter also knew, more than most, the power of all his Lord and Master had accomplished. After bragging that he would never do such a thing, Peter was forgiven for his crushing denial that betrayed Jesus on the night of His arrest.
Jesus let Peter know he was forgiven. He was a changed man after that experience, as revealed in his powerful sermon on that first Pentecost, the day in the Upper Room when the Holy Spirit descended on all who were gathered. Peter was the first recorded to minister to others following this holy experience that empowered them all.
Did not the baptism of the holy spirit change hearts, making new people of the frightened disciples who all left the Lord when He was betrayed and arrested? Jesus knew they needed the holy spirit, typified as flames of fire, in order to have His presence eternally within to to take them from fear to faith. Our Lord made His followers bold and wise, able to fulfill their commission to spread the gospel without fear or favor.
After this fiery trial came upon Peter, doing its work on Peter’s nature, the holy spirit filled him with boldness. Then Peter was able to strengthen his brethren as he was given keys to the kingdom. Peter’s faith became foundational for Christians in a way Peter could not have foreseen at the time of his most severe trial.
God’s own are destined to have such a nature, pure and malleable in His hands, always doing His will. Pure gold is soft and malleable. Love softens hearts; anger and hatred hardens hearts. Love unites; it does not divide. It is no accident that Peter admonishes us, above all, to have love because it covers a multitude of sins. Peter prioritizes love above everything, just as Paul did in 1 Corinthians 13. God is love.
It is the love of God that Peter is urging us to pursue, covering our and others’ sins in love while God cleans us all up. We are not admonished to chastise and condemn, to threaten doom and death, to cause fear or dread of eternal punishment in hell, as so many do. Instead:
“Owe no man anything, but to love one another: for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandments, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely,
Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor: therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.” Romans 13:8-10 KJV
Romans says it so beautifully! When we have the love of God fully growing within our hearts, we will not carry out any of the thou shalt not commandments. We won’t want to! These commandments of Moses have been established and known forever, but none of us humans have been able to fulfill them perfectly. We cause harm to others because we lack a heart of love for others. It isn’t the best thing for ourselves, either! It surely is not the way of obtaining the joy and peace we are promised.
God did not change the law when Jesus came. Jesus fulfilled it. Only Jesus has completely fulfilled these lawful requirements. He showed us that the way to the Father is through Him and in Him we are to be perfected, to be just like Him! He became the Christ, the Anointed, sharing this anointing with others. We have the privilege in this Day of the Lord to speak the good news to all people. He has always been speaking the good news, bringing good tidings of great joy to us.
God is continually refining the sons and daughters who belong to Him. The priesthood of this Day is to be prepared to show forth the glory of God as His purified saints of gold and silver. If we are to grow, we need to go through these fiery trials that require us to endure with faith the intense times of adversity, including unearned suffering. Though unpleasant and painful, God takes us through rather than out of these adverse experiences to change us into His likeness and image.
Satan means them for evil, but God turns them for our good. We really should not be surprised or think it is strange, or that He is somehow mistreating His own or satan is having his way with us. No, this is good news! It means He is coming to sit—stay, dwell—not just visit us, us as His temple.
Jesus said the kingdom of God is within us:
“Now being inquired of by the Pharisees as to when the Kingdom of God is coming, He answered them and said, ‘The kingdom of God is not coming with scrutiny.
Neither shall they be declaring, ‘Lo ! here’ or ‘Lo! there,’ for Lo! the Kingdom of God is inside of you.’” Luke 17:20-21 Concordant Literal
This is another passage more correctly understood from the Concordant Literal that draws from the original Greek. Scrutiny means “critical observation or examination,” something we can see or perceive by closely and critically looking. Strong’s Concordance translates scrutiny as “inspecting, ocular evidence, observation, note scrupulously” from the original Greek.
The kingdom cannot be seen by just looking with our human eyes, just like we cannot hear God without spiritual ears to hear. Thus, the kingdom is not coming to a certain city or region or outer atmosphere in the clouds that we can see with our natural eyes. This issue is so very clear: if it does not come with scrutiny, it’s not coming where we visibly see with our eyes a certain place nor is it in a specific location in the earth.
The kingdom of God was already in their midst when Jesus spoke those words. He was there, in their midst, bringing that kingdom to the earth, though those with only natural eyes and ears did not see it at all. In this passage, inside of us is alternately translated as in you (KJV) or in your midst (Berean). It has always been so for His people.
Jesus is saying He is already here, already in the process of coming inside of us when we invite Him in. In this Day of the Lord dawning upon us, fiery trials are heating up all over in this world. Such are signs of His coming. With His kingdom inside of us, we are able to see God revealed more and more in His saints as we show forth our Christ-like character.
When He comes, He sits as a fiery, purifying presence to burn up our dross, making us like Him, complete in Him, brought to the reality of the maturity of His perfection. Already, judgment has come to His house and is it not a great and terrible day?
“For it is time for judgment to begin with God’s household; and if it begins with us, what will the outcome be for those who do not obey the gospel of God?” 1 Peter 4:17 NIV
Judgment has begun at the House of God. And if it is this difficult for us, the people of faith, how is it for those who do not obey? This does not have to be read as a threat, but a concern, a compassion. Going through times of trial with the Lord definitely increases our compassion and mercy for the many others in the world who do not know or obey Him through these same afflictions common to man.
God is putting us earth dwellers through fearful times of suffering and loss, purifying those of us determined to follow Him, creating sons of God led by His spirit. He will have a people with no guile. Jesus said Nathaniel was such a man:
"Jesus saw Nathanael coming to Him, and said of him, 'Behold, an Israelite indeed, in whom there is no deceit!'” John 1:47 NKJV
No deceit, no hypocrisy, no manipulation, no dishonesty, no self! The Lord has been forming His spiritual government, the chosen government in spiritual Zion where each is perfected, becoming a people wherein there is no guile. Here’s how John the Revelator wrote it down:
“These are the ones who have not been defiled with women, for they are virgins. They follow the Lamb wherever He goes. They have been redeemed from among men as firstfruits to God and to the Lamb.
And no lie was found in their mouths; they are blameless.” Revelation 14:5
The spiritual language used here about virgins means that they only have the God-seed by following the Lamb. No soulish defilement or impurities are dominating them, planting fleshly seeds from human soulish leadership within or without, just the pure word of the Lord. Thus we are being prepared to rule and reign with the King of kings and Lord of Lords. As we suffer with Him, we are fulfilling our ultimate destiny to reign with Him:
“Therefore I endure all things for the elect's sakes, that they may also obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. It is a faithful saying: For if we be dead with him, we shall also live with him:
If we suffer, we shall also reign with him: if we deny him, he also will deny us: If we believe not, yet he abideth faithful: he cannot deny himself.” 2 Timothy 2:110-13 KJV
We endure all things through Christ to be a part of His Kingdom, to conquer all, to overcome all as He has done. What does it mean to reign with Him? It’s more than our carnal mental image of a huge throne where we sit down with Father and Son. It is absolutely not an invitation to rule over others like earthly kings have done.
Jesus reigned over His own flesh while being a servant to all. He completely defeated the power of sin and death when He rose again, making a way for all others. Will He not have a ruling government who also reigns over the flesh man such that only the Christ remains?Because we have yet to see it in its completion does not make it untrue.
That’s what faith is, believing for things we cannot see. We learn to go through it as our destiny is to live only in Him. He remains faithful to His word regardless of any unbelief, shortcomings, or span of time it takes. Heart impurities float to the top to be skimmed off as with the refining of gold and silver, burned up by Him who dwells within.
Though it seem impossible to our human understanding, our prize is to be like Him, only doing the Father’s will. Only God knows how far we can grow on this side of heaven on into eternity with Him. Note that Paul calls the High calling of God a prize—it is not a free gift like grace or salvation. Under God’s hand, we believers go through trials for His purpose, to win this most precious prize.
“To the angel of the church in Smyrna write: ‘These are the words of the First and the Last, who died and returned to life. I know your affliction and your poverty—though you are rich! And I am aware of the slander of those who falsely claim to be Jews, but are in fact a synagogue of Satan.
Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Look, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison to test you, and you will suffer tribulation for ten days. Be faithful even unto death, and I will give you the crown of life.'
‘He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. The one who overcomes will not be harmed by the second death.” Revelation 2:8-11 Berean
The church of Smyrna had martyrs who already had suffered great tribulation and were rich in Him because of it. He does not ask more of these precious saints, promising them the crown of life as they remain faithful. They have already gone through their second death—that death to self that is required of all who love and serve Him to the fullest. These are the called according to His purpose, running after the prize, the reward of His highest calling.
This is an incredible promise to not suffer harm and loss but be enriched by the fires of change that come upon God’s own. Lest you think it is possible to avoid all of this by being swept to heaven by a rapture, search the scriptures again. It’s hard to find just one Bible story that reveals any of God’s people who are taken out of their battles rather than facing them through to the victory God promised.
Fires of change come to teach us to overcome every challenge, every adversity through the victory He has already won. Even in Noah’s day, the chosen people experienced the flood, with God’s provision to live through it. We go through great earthly events, purgings and shakings, with Jesus Christ our Lord, victorious in Him. God’s plan is purposeful and effective. After all, how are we to learn that He is faithful in all things and always provides a way of escape?
These saints in Smyrna and the great martyrs represent those wounded with deep affliction and suffering, experiencing persecution even unto death from those opposed to our Lord and His reign. The devil has been and continues to be allowed by God to throw some in prison and on into martyrdom because of the name of Jesus.
Who but our Creator knows just what refining fires we each individually need to shine pure with His presence? Fiery trials came then and continue to come now. And there’s no way by observation that we can understand another’s trial in number and severity. On occasion, another’s trials seem easier, lighter than what God is allowing in our lives. Alternately, others seem be having much more suffering than what God has allowed in our own lives.
We do suffer with other Christians as they experience trials that are much, much worse, severely oppressive compared to what we have to endure. God is no respecter of persons. He is bringing the same on the just and the unjust in this world until it is time for His harvest. But some of us have unearned mercy and blessings because of where God placed us on earth.
“But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.” Matthew 5:44-45 Berean
Everyone goes through trials and suffering, but some of us have a different outcome. Because Jesus is in us, His seed is producing the growth of His kingdom of righteousness, peace, and joy, planted within us, in our hearts. It can be a hard truth to face when we learn that He really will allow us to go through difficulties for our good, just like Jesus did, rather than deliver us out of them immediately!
This does not seem like good news, does it? No trial is pleasant, but we endure with His strength, looking for the outcome of more of Him within us. It may feel overwhelming, like we won’t be able to get through all of the many trials that come our way, but He promises and He never lies.
“The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears; He delivers them from all their troubles. The Lord is near to the brokenhearted; He saves the contrite in spirit.
Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivers him from them all.” Psalms 34:17-19 Berean
Psalms 34 repeats over and over how God delivers His own. The Lord delivers us from all afflictions. It may seem we will never recover or heal from some things that happen to us in this world, but that is not true. Yes indeed, we are forever changed by some things, but God is always, always faithful. He is the healer of hearts and the restorer of what was lost internally, that precious fruit of the spirit that seems hard to come by during such experiences.
The Lord restores our souls, as David’s most beautiful Psalm states:
“The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures; He leads me beside quiet waters. He restores my soul; He guides me in the paths of righteousness for the sake of His name.
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.” Psalms 23:1-6 Berean
David was a shepherd who know how to keep the sheep that he tended for his father from danger. He knew where the green pastures and still waters needed for restoration were to be found. Our souls become weary during times of suffering and affliction, but He restores, renews, refreshes with His very presence, His leading even with rod and staff. He is very near to us when we are broken-hearted, regardless of whether we feel His presence or not.
God rarely excludes Christians from things that come upon this earth, but He always hears the cry of the righteous, delivering us from all our troubles, comforting us and strengthening us. H sees the condition of our hearts when we are brokenhearted and overwhelmed. That is a heart He will not turn away. When a loved one passes on, we cannot have them be restored to us. We are comforted by God, however, knowing that they are delivered from further suffering.
We endure by walking with Him. These and other wounds of our hearts are healed by Him over time, in His way, so that we may go on. Who can say their life is the same as it was before some trials? There are experiences of pain and loss that change us forever, as we suffer with others all that is allowed to come upon mankind in this world. His restoration is not into that former life, the one we had before that fiery trial came upon us.
We learn to accept that the healing we have been praying for is brought through the death of the physical body of those we love. We see the character that is built regardless of the time of challenges. Though some are free now, in the spirit on the other side, they are not restored to us. It’s hard for those of us trapped in time to understand and accept that death as an eternal deliverance.
Yes, our lives are forever changed by tragedy and loss, trauma and pain, but the wounds or scars do not have to remain. He is able to cleanse the deepest wounds of the heart, compassionately healing and restoring the most severely wounded of His own beloved people. Many of us have seen Jesus Christ do just this with the deepest of wounds humans are known to suffer.
Then we are able, as Jesus said to Simon Peter;
“Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift each of you like wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith will not fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.” Luke 22:31-32 NASB
Jesus the Healer is present, near even those who do not acknowledge belief in His name. God raises up Healers to be used by Him, often to strengthen others who are going through similar experiences. God’s healers are often those who have experienced such fiery and undeserved wounding, to eventually emerge anew, stronger, more steadfast, with more intimacy with our God.
Many are called to serve the saints of the most high God in this great work of His refinement, healing and reconcilation. We may recall what happened or go on to forget, not speaking of it unless it is edifying to others. We no longer dwell on these times or mentally rehearse them. We are enabled to forget the past in internal and external ways through His spirit. We are no longer surprised by a sudden bad memory popping up in our daily lives.
God has taken away the pain and cleaned out the wounds of hurt, anger, and loss. Then we may do what Job says:
“Yet if you devote your heart to him and stretch out your hands to him, if you put away the sin that is in your hand and allow no evil to dwell in your tent, then, free of fault, you will lift up your face; you will stand firm and without fear.
You will surely forget your trouble, recalling it only as waters gone by. Life will be brighter than noonday, and darkness will become like morning. You will be secure, because there is hope; you will look about you and take your rest in safety. You will lie down, with no one to make you afraid and many will court your favor.” Job 11:13-19 NIV
Here again is a heart without guile. God first requires that we prepare our hearts, beseeching Him for change. We put lawlessness and iniquity far from us as we look to Him. We are then set in our place without fear. We forget the misery of it as something that came and went, like waters from a flood that has passed through. We are enabled to trust because we have hope—an expectation in Him to provide a safe place where we are enabled to trust Him, bringing rest and peace, regardless of what is allowed to come our way.
“So shall they fear the name of the Lord from the west, and his glory from the rising of the sun. When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord shall lift up a standard against him.” Isaiah 59:19-20 KJV
Consider this expanded passage translated from the original Hebrew:
“‘And they from the west shall fear the name of Yahweh, and those from the rising of the sun, His glorious name. For the foe shall come as a stream. The spirit of Yahweh makes him flee. And there comes to Zion the Redeemer, and He shall turn back transgression from Jacob,’ averring is Yahweh.
‘And I--this is My covenant with them’, says Yahweh. ‘My spirit, which is on you, and My word, which I place in your mouth, shall not remove from your mouth, or from the mouth of your seed, or from the mouth of your seed's seed,’ says Yahweh, ‘henceforth and till the eon.’” Isaiah 59:19-21 Concordant Literal
What amazing promises these are! The standard of the Lord is faithful and true and His Redeemer has come! God uses many methods for this healing process as healers from all walks of life do His compassionate work in His saints. He promises to wipe away all tears and shame now, on this earth, not later in heaven when we no longer need it. What a wonder He is! Who is like our God, doing the impossible in the fleshly heart of humans? Multitudes of His saints, the called, chosen, and faithful, are testimony to this truth.
Change does take time, taking longer—sometimes many years—before the fruit of what God allowed becomes evident in our lives. It does seem like forever we have been following hard after Him, longing for Him pursuing Him and His ways. This process of inner heart change seems to happen bit by bit, inch by inch! But, like Paul, we pursue the prize of the high calling available to the overcomers. We go on in Him, knowing we have impurities, spots on our garments that He has yet to clean up and destroy, using that soap in His hands to cleanse, as well as the fiery trials of change.
How those saints, past and present, shine with God’s glory as they emerge from the crucible of fire that God allowed to happen. How remarkable are the faces, the countenance of the many saints who have come through excruciating trials and tests, to come forth as gold! We are an unfinished work, each one of us! But oh, how we shine with His light and glory as we emerge from the fiery furnace of affliction and suffering!
There’s a most powerful account in the book of Daniel of three young saints who emerged victorious from a literal fiery furnace of affliction. King Nebechednesser reached a point in his reign when he forgot Who had exalted him as ruler and thought he was God. He sent out a decree that all should bow before him. The three Hebrew children, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, refused to do it.
These young men would bow down only to their God, whom they had openly worshiped all during their captivity. Because of their obedience to God rather than the King, they were thrown into a fiery furnace. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego did not escape the King’s decree. They had to experience the literal fiery furnace that the King ordered his servants to throw them in. The King’s servants were even directed to make the furnace seven times hotter!
Yet these three servants of the Most High God steadfastly held to God. They remained determined to do what was right in God’s eyes whether God delivered them or not. They steadfastly confessed their belief that their Lord would deliver them from this severe trial. They sought no escape by denying God. As a result, they were thrown into the fiery furnace that the earthly King’s servants had prepared for their punishment.
Here’ the account:
“... Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego replied to him, ‘King Nebuchadnezzar, we do not need to defend ourselves before you in this matter. If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to deliver us from it, and he will deliver us from Your Majesty’s hand. But even if he does not, we want you to know, Your Majesty, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up’…
Then Nebuchadnezzar the king [watched and] was astounded and stood up in haste; he responded and said to his high officials, ‘Was it not three men we cast bound into the midst of the fire?’ They answered and said to the king, ‘Certainly, O king.’ He answered and said, ‘Look! I see four men loosed and walking about in the midst of the fire without harm, and the appearance of the fourth is like a son of the gods!” …
and when the satraps, prefects, governors, and royal advisers had gathered around, they saw that the fire had no effect on the bodies of these men. Not a hair of their heads was singed, their robes were unaffected, and there was no smell of fire on them.” Daniel 3:16-18; 24-25; 27 NIV
Even if He does not…! What complete and steadfast faith! Oh to say this to our God when we are cast into the fiery furnaces of this life! To turn to our God with trust that He will deliver us, but even if not…! They told the King they did not need to defend or explain themselves to Him. Amazing! King Nebuchadnezzar saw a fourth person, like the son of the gods, our Lord Jesus Christ, in their midst in the furnace, enabling them to endure it all..
Whether we know or can feel it or not, Jesus is most close to us in our suffering. He is certainly in the fires of change with us, just as He appeared with these servants of the most High. As these three revealed, we are enabled to emerge not only victorious but with no outward evidence that we have been in such a trial! Not even the smell of smoke!
What does emerging from a fiery trial with not even the smell of fire mean for us in our trials today? This is what others who are observing will see in us as we allow the fires to do their work. They will not see the evidence of suffering, or hear how difficult it was, or smell the discouragement or fear of being in the fire as we testify with our character that the Lord within got us through it.
Though we may not be thrown into a literal fiery furnace, it can sure feel like it! The fires of affliction that come upon us may be directed by the earthly kings of our day, inside of us as well as external evil from those without God’s love. God has vessels of honor and dishonor that He uses. Like our Lord, we may suffer without fault, undeservedly, as well as suffer because of sin in self. Remember, our God is a consuming fire. He will shake anything that is not of Him, anything that can be shaken.
What the enemy brings our way, He will use for our good. He said all things will work together for those of us who love the Lord and are called according to His purpose. The kingdom He builds within us is unshakable. He allows others to bring adversity meant for evil as part of our process of change. If you do not believe it, read about it in the Bible as well as in numerous accounts of the lives of His saints through the centuries.
These three young men of God knew their God was able to deliver them, but their faith in God goes further. They left the final decision up to God, knowing it was His business. Think of it: “if we perish, we perish.” They left the outcome in God’s hands, making the King know that even if God did not deliver them, they would not worship the King’s idols nor follow his decrees. In their hearts of faith, there was nothing this earthly King could do to force them to worship other gods. They glorified God, not the fiery furnace throughout, emerging with no harm.
This is so much more than a short story of three Hebrews in bondage. Their trust in their God is absolute and they came out with no physical, outward evidence that they had even been in this fiery trial. When we face severe circumstances, when we are allowed by God to experience life-threatening adversity and hardship, we might be tempted by doubts and fears. We might murmur and complain during and after such difficulties. We often want others to know how we have suffered. It is human but it is not God’s highest.
Our Lord experienced this in the wilderness when He was tempted by the devil. He had to pass these tests to be what His Father had sent Him to be for all of us. We want to be like Him but are any of us glad and rejoicing when such experiences come upon us in our lives? We all much prefer the pleasant, peaceful times of our walk in God. When circumstances come that shake our very foundation in God, when the unthinkable happens to us or those we care about, our faith truly is tested as God ordains.
We may cry out in pain and confusion: “Why did you let this happen? Don’t you care, Lord? Why did you not show forth your deliverance? I know you are able.” We think if we were in charge, we would have done things differently in this old world! We may begin to doubt God’s love, if not His purpose, in all of it. Some even take it a step further and conclude that our God is not, after all, all-powerful and loving.
It certainly does not appear, to our way of thinking, to be loving when God allows such deep suffering and affliction for His own, allowing harm to come to the many innocent in this world. Some even have such a separation of good and evil in their understanding that it is as if the battle against evil was not already victoriously completed in Christ. This is eating of the tree of good and evil, rather than from the Tree of Life.
Such believers see satan as solely responsible for bad and God for good despite the scriptures that speak a different truth. And was not the battle against evil won on the cross by our Savior thru His resurrection? There are many good people who do not know the Lord, showing forth mercy and compassion in this world. Evil is all around us, dwelling in the hearts of fallible men and women walking on this earth.
The same event meant for evil God uses for good when it is surrendered to Him as the three servants of God did centuries ago. Did not the religious leaders of Jesus’ day persecute Jesus, instigating His crucifixion, driven by evil satanic forces? And did God not work this to the good of all mankind? Evil is in this world, working through people driven by forces of darkness, even in highest religious places of the era.
We learn obedience through suffering just as Jesus Christ was taught obedience through what He suffered. He had much undeserved suffering, and so do we as we follow on to know Him. There’s no glory in suffering we bring on ourselves, but the unfair, undeserved, most difficult fiery trials, are not what we deserve but what God allows for our good. We pass our tests as He passed His, by standing on the word of God as well as knowing the Father’s heart of love and mercy.
There’s no escape from it, but we can learn to rejoice during it, as the Word directs us to do, though it’s no easy task! We can come to the place where we welcome the fires of change in our lives, trusting our Lord to take us through them. We all go through adversity as part of this life on earth. As we serve the living God, this life brings struggles with a purpose to the pain.
“Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous; nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto those who are exercised thereby." Hebrews 12:11 KJV
The fires bring about change within us as we submit our will to Him. They work the fruit of righteousness in us, if we allow them to exercise us. We draw upon His strength to turn our will to His, to determine, like these Hebrews in bondage, to do what God wants regardless of what He allows the outcome to be. We come to accept that He is God and we are not. Is this not what God required of the early Christians as they were persecuted unto death for the sake of Christ?
This is the highest and most difficult surrender we can offer. Not our will, but His be done. As we bow in submission to Him, we are surrendering any right to live affliction-free in this world. Yes, what satan means for evil, God means for and uses for good. It has always been so, revealed throughout the Old and the New Testament. This plan of God is far beyond our understanding as believers. His thoughts and ways are higher than ours.
Many times, our human minds cannot comprehend God’s eternal plan and purpose. Our troubled souls cry out with Jeremiah, the prophet:
“Righteous are You, O Lord when I plead before You. Yet about Your judgments I wish to contend with You: Why does the way of the wicked prosper? Why do all the faithless live at ease?” Jeremiah 12:1 Berean
Jeremiah struggled with how God allows evil to continue, the wicked to prosper, despite the words of God this faithful prophet was bringing, over and over. To our earthly way of thinking, the righteous should be prosperous and have success, living at ease, not the wicked! Where is the reward for living a godly life if that is not so? Jeremiah was speaking from a place of discouragement, looking at what was happening in the earth around him. God’s people were in bondage, suffering because God had abandoned them to their own ways.
So why do the righteous suffer? Consider King David, the forefather of our Lord Jesus Christ, who was given exceedingly great and precious promises, including the promise to rule and reign as King over God’s people. God proved faithful to David in all He had said to Him. Yet David faced much opposition, experiencing many fiery trials and afflictions over many years before he was King. David even had enemies in his own household.
When David served King Saul, he did nothing but good to him. Later, David had to be on the run for some time as Saul sought to kill him. During one of these many times, David cried out to God:
“How long, O Lord? Will You forget me forever? How long will You hide Your face from me? How long must I wrestle in my soul, with sorrow in my heart each day? How long will my enemy dominate me?” Psalms 13:1-2 NIV
We are in saintly company when we struggle with what God allows in our lives and the lives of others dwelling on the earth. We cry out with David, “How long, Lord?” Our souls struggle to endure these times of seeming defeat, when the enemies within and without dominate. We surely cannot think about these things as the world does, as if a peaceful, externally trouble-free, prosperous life is a sign of godliness!
We now discern that these were the very experiences that prepared David for rulership, building his faith and trust in God. And is this not often God’s way? David was so very obedient that he refused to kill Saul when he had the opportunity, passing another test that God allowed and being a strong witness to his own army of warriors:
“After Saul had returned from pursuing the Philistines, he was told, ‘David is in the wilderness of En-gedi.’ So Saul took three thousand chosen men from all Israel and went to look for David and his men in the region of the Rocks of the Wild Goats.
Soon Saul came to the sheepfolds along the road, where there was a cave, and he went in to relieve himself. And David and his men were hiding in the recesses of the cave. So David’s men said to him, ‘This is the day about which the LORD said to you, ‘Behold, I will deliver your enemy into your hand, that you may do with him as you wish.’
Then David crept up and stealthily cut off a corner of Saul’s robe. Afterward, David’s conscience was stricken because he had cut off the corner of Saul’s robe. So he said to his men, ‘The LORD forbid that I should do such a thing to my master, the LORD’s anointed. May I never lift my hand against him, since he is the LORD’s anointed.’
With these words David restrained his men, and he did not let them rise up against Saul. Then Saul left the cave and went on his way.” 1 Samuel 24:1-7 Berean
After this, David showed Saul the piece of his garment to illustrate that he was not Saul’s enemy. Saul temporarily remembered the love he and David had shared when David was in his household, but this change of heart did not last. How very discouraging when we get glimpses of deliverance, only to have those who come against us harden their hearts, renew their attacks, sustaining their choice to be our enemies in this world.
However, we who serve the Living God have a multitude of blessings from this, God’s work in us, bringing the kingdom of peace, love, and joy within. What is more blessed than these intangible and incredible gifts we are given? If our faith is not tested, refined by fiery trials, how strong is it within us? What if our peace, love, and joy disappear in an instant with opposition and adversity, large or small?
God is surely preparing us for ruling and reigning this way, just as He did with David. He wants us to sustain our victories in Him! We can talk with our Lord just as David did, seeking answers to settle questions in our hearts as well as comfort in our sorrow and pain. We may not be able to fathom, with our own understanding, God’s purpose in allowing what is happening to us, to others, to all the suffering people of the world. At these times of wrestling in our own souls, we draw close to God to understand.
He is eternally able and willing to reveal more of His thoughts and ways by His spirit. Oh, how we need His spirit to understand His thoughts and ways, so different from ours! God is spirit, He is everywhere, and we connect and relate to Him in spirit. Notice that many of David’s psalms start out in anguish, but end up in the surrender of worship, praise and thanksgiving. So it is with us. We are comforted in our afflictions, reassured in our troubles that He is there, in that fiery furnace with us, and that we will come forth shining in the gold of His nature. Not even the smell of fire shall be around us!
We need to take great care in not offering easily spoken words of religious advice to others who are going through their trials, particularly when they are going through things we have never faced. I’ve done it in my zeal, even during a similar trial, before I have even gone through my trial onto victory. Then I struggle and stumble, showing forth that I have not yet overcome. Jesus told Simon Peter to strengthen his brothers after he, himself, was strengthened.
Some things that happen in this life on earth may never be understood or explained to us by God. Sometimes there is no answer that comes to the question of why. Then we must reckon with the issue of who God really is. Is He a God of love and mercy or not? Is He true to His word or a liar? These three Hebrew saints, long ago, were convinced in their hearts that God was in charge and His intent towards them was good regardless of circumstances. They did not doubt or question what had come upon them, complaining about the situation and looking for a human way of escape as we often do.
With some baffling circumstances, we can only conclude that He is God and we are not. Either He is who He says He is and we stand on it or we continually wrestle with doubt and fear, even walking away from this life of faith we do not understand. However, we may not know why, but we can know why not. The fires of change have not come upon us because God does not love us or we have displeased Him in some way. In fact, it is because He loves us that He chastens us by taking us through these times.
He truly does discipline us as sons for our good, as any true Father does. He set this life up as a training ground, God’s school to train up His sons and daughters to live and rule in His kingdom. Such is the way of change, for our Lord Jesus Christ as well as for ourselves. He learned obedience through the things He suffered and so do we. There are trials that bring pain, loss, and confusion, yes, but they work His glory in us as we yield to His will and way within us. We wish it were not so, but it is His truth:
“For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory, while we do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen.” 2 Corinthians 4:17-18 NKJV
Light affliction? For a moment?? It surely does not seem that way in the midst of the fire! But our Lord makes Himself seen and known to unbelievers when He shows up in the midst of His saints going through such trials. Unbelievers notice our faith more when there is no earthly reason for it, more so than when we are in periods of wonderful blessing and peace. In the midst of fiery trials, God gives peace that goes beyond our understanding:
“And the peace of God [that peace which reassures the heart, that peace] which transcends all understanding, [that peace which] stands guard over your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus [is yours].” Philippians 4:7 Amplified
When there is no visible reason to have peace, He gives it. It is above our understanding, transcending all human comprehension. His peace stands guard over our hearts and minds because we belong to Him, we are His eternally. God does it now just as He did it then when the King and all the unbelievers around him saw the Lord in the midst of the flames.
God is here to show forth His great majesty and power —not just to us but to others who are observing what we are going through. We are being processed in order to show forth the gold of His nature working in us through His refining fires. Our fleshly ways, our carnal reactions that He is burning up in us become a pile of ashes to submit to him so that He makes beauty from them.
Let’s revisit again our three Hebrew saints to see the outcome of this literal fiery trial they endured:
“Then Nebuchadnezzar spake, and said, ‘Blessed be the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who hath sent his angel, and delivered his servants that trusted in him, and have changed the king's word, and yielded their bodies, that they might not serve nor worship any god, except their own God.
Therefore I make a decree, That every people, nation, and language, which speaks anything amiss against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, shall be cut in pieces, and their houses shall be made a dunghill: because there is no other God that can deliver after this sort.
Then the king promoted Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the province of Babylon.” Daniel 3:29-30 KJV
No other god can deliver in this way! Not only was their situation much better than before all of this, but the King reversed His decree because he knew there was no other god like our God! He became a believer and they got a promotion! Who would have anticipated that?!
God is the perfect sifter of wheat and chaff, taking what is not needed to burn up, leaving the wheat (gold) that He has refined through the fire of our experiences. Think of it! Hallelujah! He turns all for His purposes in those who are called, chosen, and faithful. Just like the three Hebrews, it is possible that no one even sees evidence that we are in or have just come out of a fiery trial. But they do see Him!
Many, many saints through the centuries have made the same determination that these three young Hebrews did. No matter what God allowed, they were determined, they had made up their minds to serve the Lord. We cannot know what was in the hearts of those saints, past or present, who are victorious through the fires of change. But we can see and hear about how they came out. These are ones who emerge not even smelling of smoke.
There is no outward evidence remaining of their afflictions except the peaceable fruit of righteous character in them. The fiery trials are not their focus nor the key part of their ongoing narratives unless God makes a ministry of it, as He often does with specific sufferings. Unless it is to testify of the greatness and majesty of our God after times of testing and trials are concluded, they may never speak of it.
Some have had great ministries founded upon God taking them through incredible, traumatic, even horrific events. These ones, precious in God’s sight, are allowed suffering just as Jesus had, for the purpose and plan of God. As these saints are strengthened, they are able to strengthen the rest of us, their brothers and sisters in Christ.
“But we do see Jesus, who was made lower than the angels for a little while, now crowned with glory and honor because he suffered death, so that by the grace of God he might taste death for everyone.” Hebrews 2:9 NIV
We will have adversity in this life. We may wish it weren’t so, but the fires of change are a most important part of our spiritual journey. We comfort ourselves and each other, learning not to fear because the Lord of heaven and earth is with us. He is not only our Comforter but our Savior to the uttermost. The assurance that God is in the fire with us provides what we need to endure.
We too can come out with no damage, not even the smell of smoke through all the trials and tests God allows for His saints to be perfected. God is more than able to turn all for good for those who love Him, bringing healing and restoration to our wounded souls. If you are a Christian who thinks life as a believer should go smoothly and the devil is totally responsible for any obstacles in your path, consider this:
“The Lord will give you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction, but your Teacher will no longer hide Himself—with your own eyes, you will see Him. And whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear this command behind you: ‘This is the way. Walk in it.’” Isaiah 30:21 Berean
God is our teacher, revealing His faithfulness and power in times of adversity and affliction, even more so than in times of plenty and prosperity. He reveals the astounding truth that He is our teacher in it. We know saints whose godly natures have been so refined by life that the sweetness and purity of the Lord is visible in their daily interactions with others. They need not speak of what they believe or have gone through. The work God has been doing in them lights them from within.
Many of our elders who have passed on had His shining light visible on their countenance, reflecting the maturity gained as the character of Christ shining forth from them. Time after time, all through the centuries, God takes His people through, rather than out of, adversity. All of us experienced this in 2020 with the worldwide pandemic. There were very few who escaped consequences of that period in our world history.
God brought us through the stress and loss this worldwide affliction caused and that continued to impact the peoples of all nations. There was no way to escape it and only our God to strengthen us and our faith as we endured it. He proves Himself to be our High Tower:
“The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower.” Psalms 18:2 KJV
Oh, what a God we serve! How His words reassure and inspire us during such times! How He holds us lovingly in the palm of His hands! With our spiritual eyes, we saw what He was accomplishing within people when this horrible virus came upon all. Many became much more clear about what is really important in this life through this truly frightening time of global suffering and loss. We encourage each other as we walk through the fires of this life, knowing that even when meant for evil by our enemy, God turns all for good for those who love Him.
We can praise Him for His answers before we can see them, demonstrating our faith. Allow these words of Psalms 91 to sink into your hearts:
“He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, ‘You are my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’
Surely He will deliver you from the snare of the fowler, and from the deadly plague. He will cover you with His feathers; under His wings, you will find refuge; His faithfulness is a shield and rampart.
You will not fear the terror of the night, nor the arrow that flies by day, nor the pestilence that stalks in the darkness, nor the calamity that destroys at noon. Though a thousand may fall at your side, and ten thousand at your right hand, no harm will come near you.
You will only see it with your eyes and witness the punishment of the wicked. Because you have made the Lord your dwelling—my refuge, the Most High—no evil will befall you, no plague will approach your tent.
For He will command His angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways. They will lift you up in their hands so that you will not strike your foot against a stone. You will tread on the lion and cobra; you will trample the young lion and serpent.
‘Because he loves Me, I will deliver him; because he knows My name, I will protect him. When he calls out to Me, I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble. I will deliver him and honor him. With long life, I will satisfy him and show him My salvation.’” Psalms 91 Berean
Such wonderful words of assurance of His love and protection! But wait. This horrible plague did come upon many of us. Many Christians became ill and many of us lost loved ones during this time. Thousands certainly did have this disease approach our tents where we dwell. Do these facts make the above scriptures untrue? Surely not, as where we dwell, our homeland, is not on this earth.
These are times that test men’s hearts and trouble our souls. Those who do no know the Lord and His ways can’t see it, but the more He returns within a people, the more disruptive He is in the earthy, carnal places where humans have their dwellings. God surely is the only safety now and in the Day to come. Let His word be truth and all people liars!
We can believe what we do not yet see. He is coming to those who love Him, a second time appearing. It is possible to walk through such times in peace and rest as we yield our will and walk in His paths. These are Gethsemane times, where our hearts pray “not my will, but Thine be done.” Many Christians were gifted with these qualities of His kingdom as we endured the pandemic.
No, God did not take many of us out of it, but He surely was with us throughout. God also does not look at death like we on earth do. Death is a deliverance for some, especially His saints. Their suffering is ended and there is no more suffering of adversity for them on this earth.
“Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints.” Psalms 116:15 Berean
God is surely mindful of the deaths of those we love, what we humans consider the ultimate loss. The death of those who believe and serve Him is in His sight. He is neither uncaring nor distant when this happens. If it is precious, of concern to Him, He clearly views death in a much different light than we dwellers of this earth. He does not consider physical death as the ultimate loss. God is always after our hearts, cherishing our spiritual growth more than our earthly comfort.
Meanwhile, more disease, famine, and dangers—fires, floods, storms, drought, and wars— wrack the earth with their power to destroy. Regardless of this — and more— coming upon our earth, God is amazingly able to bring His peace that passes (is beyond) human understanding to those who serve Him.
Because our God is Who He says He is, a God of mercy and love, comfort and deliverance, He will deliver our hearts from ultimate destruction. The Spirit within us takes us through, lifting us above earthly events into the spirit of His kingdom. He is able and gracious to grant it. Surrender to His will with faith in His word and confidence in His nature. This is the path of life in God, an He makes us to rejoice in and through all things:
“Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you.
But rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings; that, when his glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.” 1 Peter 4:12-13 KJV
Repentance
In this blog, I delve into the essence of true repentance, as described in the Bible. I emphasize that genuine repentance is a heartfelt transformation rather than mere outward expression, aligning with God’s nature of compassion and mercy, and involves a continuous commitment to align one's heart and actions with God’s will.
“‘Even now,’ says the Lord, ‘turn and come to Me with all your heart [in genuine repentance] with fasting and weeping and mourning [until every barrier is removed and the broken fellowship is restored]; Rip your heart to pieces [in sorrow and contrition] and not your garments.’
Now return [in repentance] to the Lord your God, for He is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger, abounding in loving kindness [faithful to His covenant with His people]; and He relents [His sentence of] evil [when His people genuinely repent].” Joel 2:12-14 Amplified
What is true repentance? It is surely more than just being sorry. Joel speaks the words of God to us in this passage of scripture describing the repentance God requires. Here is what God considers to be genuine repentance. Not surprisingly, it is a matter of the heart. His nature is not as some preach—quick to anger, ready with severe punishment and condemnation for sin, error, and unbelief.
God is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger, abounding in loving kindness, and easily entreated to relent His judgment when there is true repentance. We can count on the nature of the Lord when we have drifted from Him, erring on our spiritual journey, distracted from spiritual things long enough to be out of fellowship with God. This psalm of David, written after he sinned against God and was repentant, reveals what true repentance is:
“The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.” Psalms 51:17 ESV
Any parent who has dearly loved children who err and get caught learns to look at what is in the heart of the child. We look past outward acts of contrition to discern whether they are sincerely sorry for what they’ve done and the offense it caused. We want to see evidence of true sorrow and repentance as we are dealing with them. We don’t want just words, said to placate or minimize the consequences. We are looking for a heart-change!
Some children are soft-hearted, easily broken when facing their errors. These children have a nature to please their parents and are sorrowful that they have not done so. When the child is strong-willed and determined, however, with rebellion in the heart, they may only comply outwardly to avoid worse punishment. Consequences may be similar, but the hoped-for turnaround in attitude and behavior is not worked within.
Father God also knows His children well, what each of us needs to bring us to repentance when required. He, too, has both soft-hearted and strong-willed children, loving us all. He knows how to deal with us so that we truly repent—have a heart-change when needed. It’s not just when we first surrender to the Lord that we need to repent and confess that He is our Savior who forgives our sins.
Repentance is an ongoing condition of any heart truly belonging to God. God knows the condition of our hearts, often exposing our own hearts to us. Just like our children, we try to hide certain things from God that we know are not His way. When we get offended by another, we may harbor this offense in our heart rather than letting it go. We want to go over it, justify ourselves, indulge in what we’d like to say or do, and even act upon it.
We know what is wrong though we still want to do it so we do not take it to the Lord. When we want what we want, we distance ourselves from God so He doesn’t deal with us about it. But He always knows, as evident in how God directed the prophet Samuel to choose the shepherd boy, David, to be King Saul’s replacement. God rejected all seven of Jesse’s older sons:
“….But the Lord said unto Samuel, ‘Look not on his countenance, or on the height of his stature; because I have refused him: for the Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.’” 1 Samuel 16:7 Berean
And when David’s son, Solomon, was anointed King after Him and prayed after building the house of God:
”…then may whatever prayer or petition Your people Israel make — each knowing his own afflictions and spreading out his hands toward this temple— be heard by You from heaven, Your dwelling place.
And may You forgive and act, and repay each man according to all his ways, since You know his heart—for You alone know the hearts of all men.” 1 Kings 8:37b-38 Berean
God knows all about us and loves us anyway. When we turn back to Him, we turn back to His nature of love and mercy, truth and redemptive justice. Humans have difficulty putting all these aspects of character together, but God does not. He has the perfect balance so we will be dealt with and disciplined as His beloved children for the purpose of redeeming us.
His mercy and love is never separate from His truth and justice. His compassion is always present in full measure as He deals with His own. God will have us become more and more like Him. He said so. As God is writing on the fleshy tables of our hearts, He exposes all that we think we have hidden from Him, including things we hide from ourselves. Layer by layer, He exposes and burns up all of our soulish ways while writing His ways within.
God proves to us daily that He is compassionate, slow to anger, merciful and kind when we keep missing the mark. As He is building His kingdom within, the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh and the pride of life must end their ruling of our desires and actions. He has the power to change our hearts’ desires as well as convict us of wrong thoughts and behaviors.
Father God is about the business of redeeming our souls—our thoughts, will, and emotions—to be righteous and pure in Him. Our part is submission, surrender to Him. He knows it all, as David says:
“O Lord, You have searched me and known me. You know when I sit down and when I rise up; You understand my thought[s] from afar. You scrutinize my path and my lying down, and are intimately acquainted with all my ways.
Even before there is a word on my tongue, behold, O Lord, You know it all.” Psalms 139:1-4 Berean
He knows us in ways we do not even know ourselves. Once we connect ourselves with the Lord, we are reminded of Who God is. He is many things, named in the scriptures and even mentioned here. But there is no other characteristic given the stature of love. The word says: God is love. When we know this, trust this, how easily gwe o to Him, trusting that only He can work a lasting inner change. We learn to rest in His love for us, demonstrated through Jesus Christ our Lord.
True repentance is beyond the words we use to confess to our Father. We present ourselves to the Lord of the universe first by asking for a heart-change in our character and habits. We want that heart change that He can do. When we go to our heavenly Father, we ask and pray for Him to see what is inside of us matches our words of repentance and subsequent actions. Words are only as powerful as our heart’s commitment.
Sometimes God gives us something to do as a consequence or we may still have to bear up under consequences unless He mercifully makes a way of escape. But there is always, always some way of escape:
“There hath no temptation [trial] taken you but such as man can bear: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation make also the way of escape, that ye may be able to endure it.” 1 Corinthians 10:13 ESV
God’s way of escape is spiritual more than natural, though He certainly can and has made a literal way of escape when His own are in danger. He takes us through such times of struggle rather than out of them. He lifts us up by the spirit to soar above the issues as if we had eagle’s wings, whether dealing with the need for repentance or with other trials. Our trust in God Almighty grows as He displays His faithfulness and wisdom within and without.
How we love Him more and more as we realize how carefully He tends to us, His creation. God promised to deal with us in mercy and compassion when we repent. And He longs to have compassion on this world that He made. The steps of true repentance listed in Joel are worth further exploration. Here’s that scripture from the Concordant Literal:
“Yet even now, averring is Yahweh, return unto Me with all your heart and with fasting and with lamenting and with wailing; tear your heart and not your garments, and return to Yahweh your Elohim, for gracious and compassionate is He, slow to anger and with much benignity, and regretting over the evil.” Joel 2:12-14 Concordant Literal
This directive is to those who have begun to know His ways, as the Israelites did in the Old Testament. The first and most important step is to turn to God. Come back, return to the Lord. When we have distanced ourselves from God, lost our way somehow, the first step is just come back! We misunderstand our God and His heart if we believe we have to straighten up, fix ourselves and the situation, before we can restore intimate fellowship with Him.
Jesus Christ solidified the redemption we so need at these times. He purchased us, bought us back, ransomed us with His obedient death and resurrection. This is not to unbelievers who have yet to sense the direction or conviction of the holy spirit. But those who call ourselves by His name, we are to turn, go back, reconnect with God. Start again in turning your eyes, the focus of your life to God, away from self and the world.
It is your choice to do this or not, but God will continue to draw you such that you have no choice but to do His will as He has ordained it. Do this by coming to Him with all your heart! When our hearts are completely yielded to the Lord, He is able to turn us to the intents and actions He desires, His path for us. Being in the center of His will becomes pure joy because we only want what He wants.
What unity is then restored in our relationship with our Lord! When true repentance flows from our hearts to God’s heart, we may fast, weep, and mourn as we accept the reality of our sin against God. God says to rend the heart, not the garments. This is a challenge against the old external ways of cutting up one’s garments, repenting in sackcloth and ashes as Job did when confronted with God’s majesty.
God is not focused on our outward sacrifices or behavior. He looks to see if our heart is repentant, not if we are literally on our knees. It won’t matter what position we are in when we pray if our hearts remain far from yielded to His spirit. There’s no outward show of religious behavior that will please Father God. As an excellent, most perfect Father, He knows the hearts of His own.
God absolutely is a jealous God, “You shall have no other Gods before me.” The Israelites failed this commandment over and over and so do we! Most of us do not literally create idols of gold and silver and call them God nor do we worship beasts and mythical figures as God. But we have our idols nonetheless. All God has to do is show us what (or who) we cannot live without that has somehow become more essential than God is to us.
The idols for modern day Christians are typically good things, enjoyable experiences, what we love to spend our time and focus upon, people we love and with whom we experience life. Of course God knows we need love and connection with others. It’s not that Father God does not want His children to enjoy themselves. Far from it! We should be the most joyful people around!
But nothing should take top priority in our hearts, the seat of our affections. He is the One we are to adore. Sometimes our idols are also sinful behaviors that we cannot shake, often based upon a strong need to feel good, to be loved, to forget pain. There are many ungodly solutions we come up with to deal with our problems instead of running to the Lord. Many of the world’s sins and failings come from unmet needs that are addressed in ways that create more problems, leading to bondage instead of freedom.
But nothing is to take priority in our hearts above the Lord. We know this to be necessary, and yet we need the Lord Jesus Christ and His in-workings to make it so. We cannot do it in our flesh, any more than the Israelites could in their day. This is God’s job, already accomplished in Jesus Christ, who dwells within us, the temple of God. Faithful prayers come from the heart:
“The heartfelt and persistent prayer of a righteous man (believer) is able to accomplish much [when put into action and made effective by God—it is dynamic and can have tremendous power].” James 5:16 Amplified
God says to look at our own hearts first. We know true repentance is shown in the evidence of a changed life. It matters not how many times we fall, because He lifts us up over and over again. God has never changed His mind about us. He loves us and came to save us, not condemn us. He is guiding us continually, spiritually holding our hands as we walk.
“The steps of a man are ordered by the Lord who takes delight in his journey. Though he falls, he will not be overwhelmed, for the Lord is holding his hand.” Psalms 37:23-24 Berean
We are His beloved children, sons and daughters of God, and He cares for us. He wants us to make it, to get to the point where we can enjoy our allotment, our promised land of righteousness, peace, and joy in His kingdom. Of course our hearts become broken and shattered before the God of all glory and majesty when we miss the mark! This is inevitable after having sinned, most especially grievous sin.
God is not accepting outward acts, only the sorrowful heart that is truly sorry and regretful. All sin is missing the mark, with only our Lord able to make us so we can aim straight, hitting the mark of righteousness that He is. We return to God, established in His favor and grace once again,, we have been cleansed from any wrongdoing. There is no barrier in relationship with our heavenly Father, as we are restored to fellowship with Him.
God is our life—truly the life that pulses through our bodies is from Him. Yes, it is true, brothers and sisters—God allows do overs! We continue to honor Him, live in and for Him, look to Him to complete this work He has begun in us. There is no path, no other way for humans to earn God’s forgiveness and restoration. Jesus Christ has done it all for us. We are on our way back to restoration and reconciliation with God, planned from the foundation of the world and lost in the Garden of Eden.
Father God promised and it is unfolding now. Deeply consider these words:
“Rejoice in the Lord, you righteous ones; praise is becoming and appropriate for those who are upright [in heart--those with moral integrity and godly character]. Give thanks to the Lord with the lyre; Sing praises to Him with the harp of ten strings. Sing to Him a new song; play skillfully [on the strings] with a loud and joyful sound.
For the word of the Lord is right; and all His work is done in faithfulness. He loves righteousness and justice; the earth is full of the loving kindness of the Lord. By the word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all their host by the breath of His mouth.
He gathers the waters of the sea together as in a wineskin; He puts the deeps in storehouses. Let all the earth fear and worship the Lord; let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him. For He spoke, and it was done; He commanded, and it stood fast.
The Lord nullifies the counsel of the nations; He makes the thoughts and plans of the people ineffective. The counsel of the Lord stands forever, the thoughts and plans of His heart through all generations. Blessed [fortunate, prosperous, and favored by God] is the nation whose God is the Lord, the people whom He has chosen as His own inheritance.
The Lord looks from heaven; He sees all the sons of man; from His dwelling place He looks closely upon all the inhabitants of the earth--He who fashions the hearts of them all, Who considers and understands all that they do.
The king is not saved by the great size of his army; a warrior is not rescued by his great strength. A horse is a false hope for victory; nor does it deliver anyone by its great strength.
Behold, the eye of the Lord is upon those who fear Him [and worship Him with awe-inspired reverence and obedience], on those who hope [confidently] in His compassion and loving kindness, to rescue their lives from death and keep them alive in famine.
We wait [expectantly] for the Lord; He is our help and our shield. For in Him our heart rejoices, because we trust [lean on, rely on, and are confident] in His holy name.
Let Your [steadfast] lovingkindness, O Lord, be upon us, in proportion as we have hoped in You.” Psalms 33 Amplified
Amen and Amen, so be it!
Promise of Eternal Life
Here, we talk about the significance of faith and the Holy Spirit in understanding God's promises, emphasizing the need for spiritual understanding to grasp truths beyond literal interpretation. I explore the concepts of speaking in tongues, the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and the ultimate hope for Christians to be fully redeemed in body, soul, and spirit, as part of God's unfolding plan.
Are we believing for all that God has promised His called and chosen people? There are secrets in His word that promise more than many realize or are able to accept in faith. Just because it has not happened yet—or moreover, just because it has not happened to us, does not mean that God is not planning to completely fulfill His words of promise.
May all get their portion from God, that which is required to fill up the inner man with kingdom life. Christians who have faith to receive are filled with the spirit beyond their initial salvation, as many have experienced through the centuries.
“I still have much to tell you, but you cannot yet bear to hear it. However, when the Spirit of truth comes, He will guide you into all truth. For He will not speak on His own, but He will speak what He hears, and He will declare to you what is to come.” John 16:12-13 Berean
When God’s truth is filtered through our carnal mind, far below the mind of Christ, deception, distortion and deceit occur. If Jesus’ words were to be understood literally, without spiritual understanding, He would not have told His disciples that they could not bear it now. There was much truth in what He ministered to them but they could not grasp it until He made the holy spirit available within them on that long-ago day of Pentecost.
Jesus said His words are spirit and life. God is a spirit and desires us to worship Him in spirit and truth. When we desire to understand what is to come, we need the holy spirit to reveal it, along with all truth, spirit to spirit. In this manner, God brings His life to a fullness within through the presence of our King, the Lord Jesus Christ. While all have a measure of the holy spirit, not everyone has the evidence of speaking in tongues in their own prayer language.
We seek for all that He has for each of us. What God gives is His business. We ask in faith for all He makes available to each one, trusting the Lord to equip us as He chooses. Having our own prayer language, which differs from the gift of tongues used as a prophetic utterance to a group, is a wonderful and precious gift. With this gift, we can always know that we are praying according to God’s will:
“But if we hope for what we do not yet see, we wait for it patiently. In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know how we ought to pray, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groans too deep for words.
And He who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.” Romans 8:25-27 Berean
When we pray in our prayer language, we have confidence we are praying for God’s will. That is most valuable! We are to hope for what we have not yet seen, and there is much we have yet to see of God’s unfolding plan and purpose. How sad to limit what is possible to only what we ourselves have experienced, witnessed, heard about, or been taught. It’s like saying the vast ocean can be contained in one jar of water that we are able to hold in our hands.
“Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit in corruption.” 1 Corinthians 15:50 KJV
Flesh and blood cannot enter into His kingdom, but the spirit within us is joined to Him and learning His ways, so that we can inherit all things. We have eternal life in the spirit, and our souls (mind, will, and emotions) are being purified as we follow on to know Him. He is writing His truth on our hearts so that we can actually do His will. When we are completely and fully redeemed, our bodies will follow on into life.
This is an incredible, critical promise remaining to be fulfilled that we long to witness.We who believe know that we will live forever in the spirit, eternally with the Lord. We are born of that incorruptible seed, planted by God in our hearts. As that spiritual body within us is being fed by the word, watered by His spirit, it is growing in strength and stature to be like Him.
We already know that our spirits go back to God when we physically die. Paul spoke to those who were saying there is no resurrection:
“..we are also exposed as false witnesses about God. For we have testified about God that He raised Christ from the dead, but He did not raise Him if in fact the dead are not raised. For if the dead are not raised, then not even Christ has been raised.
And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If our hope in Christ is for this life alone, we are to be pitied more than all men.” 1 Corinthians 15:15-19 Berean
We have confidence in life after death, believing that, through the ages, Christ raises all from death into His life, each in his own rank and order. His work surely continues on the other side of the grave! We know our loved ones who have perished are alive in Him in the spirit, each in their own place. But what about the promise of God for the full redemption, without dying, of our earthly bodies according to His promise?
Where is that full victory over death, our last enemy that Jesus Christ conquered for us, not thru His death only, but also through His resurrection from the dead? We do not yet show forth God’s complete victory in our earthly bodies. Many have been healed and even the dead raised back up through the centuries, yet following that, all faced physical death.
It is obvious that death continues to work as we grow older. Aging, sickness, and disease remain the evidence that death still rules. Our last enemy is death and Jesus has gained the victory over it, be we have yet to do so. When He rose from the grave, He had the keys of death, hell, and the grave. He told John the Revelator when He appeared to Him:
“Do not be afraid. I am the First and the Last, the Living One. I was dead, and behold, now I am alive forever and ever! And I hold the keys of Death and of Hades.” Revelation 1:17b-18 Berean
To hold a key to something is to symbolically have entrance into it, with authority over unlocking the door to access what is behind it. Jesus has the victory over death in His hands, yet we continue to suffer under the dominion of death in this world. God subjected humans to death beginning with the disobedience of Adam and Eve. We long for the full reconciliation of our spirit, soul, and body, the promise of eternal life that will fully restore us to intimate fellowship with the Father eternally.
The entire creation is in bondage to sin and decay, waiting for our full adoption as sons and daughters of God. His word states that all creation longs for the full promise of eternal life.
“I consider that our present sufferings are not comparable to the glory that will be revealed in us. The creation waits in eager expectation for the revelation of the sons of God.
For the creation was subjected to futility, not by its own will, but because of the One who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God.
We know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until the present time. Not only that, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the completion of which is the redemption of our bodies.
For in this hope we were saved; but hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what he can already see? But if we hope for what we do not yet see, we wait for it patiently.” Romans 8:18-25 Berean
The full redemption, the sign of being completely adopted as sons of God is not accomplished until our bodies are redeemed. Never mind that we have not seen it yet. Isn’t that what faith is? Paul hoped for this full redemption, ministering its truth to the people of his day. Centuries later, the enemy’s work continues to show up in our bodies daily as we age. We do not have the same bodies we lived in when we were younger.
As far as we know, there has yet to be a Christian believer who has overcome death in spirit, soul, and body. This truly is a mystery, with much to be revealed and understood. Nonetheless, we are to have the faith of Abraham to hope for what we do not yet see. This earthly temple is destined to be swallowed up of life just as His spiritual body was resurrected from the dead.
Our spirit is fully alive to Him, our soul is being changed, converted into His thoughts, His will, His emotions. When this process is complete, the body in which we are housed will finally be swallowed up in victory. Hear the promise of God.
“You, however, are not in the realm of the flesh but are in the realm of the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God lives in you. And if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, they do not belong to Christ. But if Christ is in you, then even though your body is subject to death because of sin, the Spirit gives life because of righteousness.
And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you.Therefore, brothers and sisters, we have an obligation—but it is not to the flesh, to live according to it.” Romans 8:9-12 NIV
Several things are crystal clear in this passage. We are completely and totally unable to make our flesh, our carnal, earthly mind, behave and become righteous. It does not matter how much some of us might flail at our own or others’ flesh, quote the scriptures, or lay down the law. God said it is impossible to please Him in our flesh, ruled by our carnal minds, in our earthly ways and practices. The flesh may be willing but it is weak and destined to die.
But wait! We are not of the flesh but of the spirit if we allow God’s spirit to dwell within, making His home in us. This is God’s qualification, repeated twice. God’s spirit is moving in, making its home, tabernacling in His people. This, my Christian brothers and sisters, is the Feast of Tabernacles being fulfilled. This Feast is when Father God and Jesus Christ the Son come to dwell fully, to tabernacle or make their home in us, dining with us in His kingdom.
Two Feasts have been fulfilled on the earth for at least in some of God’s own: the Feast of Passover through the sacrifice and blood of Jesus and the Feast of Pentecost where He grants the firstfruits of His Holy Spirit within His saints. Finally, it is time for the Lord to reveal the secrets of the Feast of Tabernacles, the third feast as typified in the Old Testament as a spiritual pattern required of God’s people.
The Feast of Tabernacles
The Feast of Tabernacle has remained hidden from most of God’s people until this Day of the Lord. There are those, such as ourselves, who celebrate this feast annually, waiting upon God to complete this work within us in reality. God began the work of tabernacling or making His home, His dwelling, within us with the coming of Jesus, His Son. We are the temple of the Lord and collectively those called out to represent Zion on this earth.
Jesus said the kingdom of God is within us, not out there somewhere.
“Now when He was asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God would come, He answered them and said, ‘The kingdom of God does not come with observation; nor will they say, ‘See here!’ or ‘See there!’ For indeed, othe kingdom of God is within you’” Luke 17:20-21 NKJV
“Do you not know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells in you? If anyone destroys God’s temple, God will destroy him; for God’s temple is holy, and you are that temple.” 1 Corinthians 3:16 Berean
We are where the spirit of God resides, His holy habitation, where He desires to take rulership in His kingdom within. His kingdom is righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. Jesus had the Father’s kingdom within Him, when He said the kingdom was already in their midst. Now, He is in us, coming more and more to take up His rulership. We hope and wait patiently for when this dwelling within us is complete as part of His spiritual body.
When someone makes their home in you, they have fully moved in to stay! As the Lord is coming within us, He continually swallows up the dying of our carnal man in victory as He has promised but we’ve yet to see fully manifested. When that fullness is come, no sin or death can be there. The only sinless Man was Jesus Christ our Lord, but He is the firstfruits of many brethren:
“For those God foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brothers. And those He predestined, He also called; those He called, He also justified; those He justified, He also glorified.” Romans 8:29-30 Berean
We have yet to see all God will accomplish in bringing His kingdom to this earth within us, but the process has surely begun. His return will be fully seen in the saints of the Most High. Then we will be glorified as He is glorified. Is there any greater glory than having the God of the universe seen in these earthly tabernacles?
The disciples saw His resurrected body, recognizing Him as Jesus their Master and Savior, yet His spiritual body was not like our earthly bodies. He could come and go at will, being seen visibly in a body and even eating with them, then disappearing into the spirit. We are to become like our Lord Jesus Christ, the Firstborn of many brethren, showing forth His nature to all, but so far, we are still dying. We have yet to truthfully claim, as our Lord did:
“…Very truly I tell you, the Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because whatever the Father does the Son also does.” John 5:19 NIV
Which of us can say we only do what we see the Father doing, only speak what the Father gives us, as Jesus did? Can we truthfully claim that any of us are glorified as He is, doing greater works than He did, being completely like Him as He has promised is our destiny? It can seem almost blasphemous to believe that we can be just like Him, but He has said so, over and over.
We are on that path but most days, we seem so very far from being like Him! There are those who have claimed to do so, to be sons of God fully led by the spirit, but their lives do not show it—and they still die. While we pursue this prize, along with Paul, we have yet to see this promise fulfilled. Not knowing God’s timetable of certainty, we may not see it in our lifetime or even for ages to come.
But if we can only have faith for His promises that we have seen fulfilled here, that is not faith. Some have proclaimed it, but we are waiting to attain it!
Many of our elders believed in the truth of the Feast of Tabernacles, though they were not allowed to see it on this side of heaven. Sometimes these faithful ones were considered foolish to believe their bodies could live forever. But, they had faith in the redemption of the body because it is in the Word of God, faith like Abraham, who believed for what he could not yet see.
Read the foundation of this lesser known Feast of Tabernacles set as a statute forever in the Old Testament pattern:
“Then the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, ‘Speak to the children of Israel, saying: ‘The fifteenth day of this seventh month shall be the Feast of Tabernacles for seven days to the Lord. On the first day there shall be a holy convocation. You shall do no customary work on it.
For seven days you shall offer an offering made by fire to the Lord. On the eighth day you shall have a holy convocation, and you shall offer an offering made by fire to the Lord. It is a sacred assembly, and you shall do no customary work on it.
These are the feasts of the Lord which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations, to offer an offering made by fire to the Lord, a burnt offering and a grain offering, a sacrifice and drink offerings, everything on its day—besides the Sabbaths of the Lord, besides your gifts, besides all your vows, and besides all your freewill offerings which you give to the Lord.
Also on the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when you have gathered in the fruit of the land, you shall keep the feast of the Lord for seven days; on the first day there shall be a sabbath-rest, and on the eighth day a sabbath-rest.
And you shall take for yourselves on the first day the fruit of beautiful trees, branches of palm trees, the boughs of leafy trees, and willows of the brook; and you shall rejoice before the Lord your God for seven days.
You shall keep it as a feast to the Lord for seven days in the year. It shall be a statute forever in your generations. You shall celebrate it in the seventh month. You shall dwell in booths for seven days. All who are native Israelites shall dwell in booths, that your generations may know that I made the children of Israel dwell in booths when I brought them out of the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.’” Leviticus 23:33-44 NKJ
It is a statute forever! This Feast is Sukkoth on the Jewish calendar, honoring all of God’s provision throughout the year. Then the Israelites brought an actual sacrifice by fire to the Lord; now we offer the sacrifice of ourselves, all our fleshly ways, which He has been burning up in His holy presence. We bring all the fruit of the kingdom that the Lord has worked within us to Him.
The Lord is our consuming fire and Jesus made the eternal sacrifice for all so that we have a way in. We believe the promises of God revealed in His word by the holy spirit. God will continue to come within us, conquering and to conquer to change us into His likeness and image. We have plenty to go through, and much to accomplish while we endure, looking for the final completion of the full redemption promised.
Some, however, postpone same scriptural truths as only possible after physical death, but God does not make that qualification. Those who are looking to be raptured up rather than Jesus descending to reside in us, futurize these words. But what use do the dead have for death to be abolished? What tears in heaven need to be wiped awaz? What sorrows continue on to the other side?
It is us mortals whom God clothes with His imperishable self! These passages are speaking of the coming fulfillment of the Feast of Tabernacles:
“… For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed. For the perishable must be clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality.
When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come to pass: ‘Death has been swallowed up in victory.’ “ 1 Corinthians 15:52-55 Berean
There is no evidence that death has been swallowed up in victory here on earth—yet. But there is a time when the sons and daughters of God, led by His spirit, are so changed that they become His spiritual government on the earth. We have a spiritual body now that is being built, along with others called and chosen for this Day. He is refining and perfecting the spiritual man within, every spiritual sense to take over from our five physical senses.
We are to be a lasting habitation of the Lord. We are eligible for the redemption of the body where our mortality is swallowed up with life, becoming immortal, imperishable. Though we may not receive it in our lifetime on this earth, we continue to believe all He says to us while we wait and pursue Him with our whole hearts.
For a deeper understanding of this passage, consider the Concordant Literal:
“Now, this I am averring, brethren, that flesh and blood is not able to enjoy an allotment in the kingdom of God, neither is corruption enjoying an allotment of incorruption. Lo! a secret to you am I telling! we all, indeed, shall not be put to repose, yet we all shall be changed, in an instant, in the twinkling of an eye at the last trump.
For He will be trumpeting, and the dead will be roused incorruptible, and we shall be changed. For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal put on immortality. Now whenever this corruptible should be putting on incorruption and this mortal should be putting on immortality, then shall come to pass the word which is written, ‘Swallowed up was Death by Victory.’
Where, Oh Death is your victory? Where, Oh Death, is your sting? Now the sting of Death is sin, yet the power of sin is the law. Now thanks be to God, Who is giving us the victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ.” 1 Corinthians 15:50-57 Concordant Literal
Someone who trumpets something is giving a strong, clear message to pay attention. God always has His messengers for the age trumpeting His word. It is clearly stated here that all will be changed, but not everyone through death. That’s the secret! Some will be changed without being put to repose. The word repose is translated from the Greek as “sleep, to slumber, to decease, death”.
Most assume that we cannot be fully changed, made perfect as He said, while on this earth. But the scriptures talk about being perfect as He is perfect without adding when we get to heaven. This is a deception that the enemy of our souls has planted, an assumption because we have never seen anyone accomplish this except by the report that our Lord accomplished it first.
What better way to stop our growing up into Him than but telling us it is not achievable here and now? Even if you cannot believe in the redemption of the body, you can keep growing, keep overcoming, keep learning and just leave that up to God. I mean, really, what do we have to lose?
“If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Do not even tax collectors do the same? And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even Gentiles do the same? Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Matthew 5:46-48 Berean
“Therefore I urge you, brothers, on account of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what is the good, pleasing, and perfect will of God.” Romans 12:1-2 Berean
Do you think that God will not accomplish what He is confidently stating to us? Redemption of our bodies must happen and we can believe for it because it is in His word. Though we do not know when or if we will be a part of this company, we have faith in His word of promise for it to happen, in His time, to at least some of His people.
We are not to demand or insist upon it, but have faith for it. Only God knows when it is to be fulfilled and in whom. We believe in many promises for which we have no visible evidence without spiritual eyes to see and spiritual ears to hear Him. Death continually stings us and all those we love through sin, destroying our mortal bodies. Sin brings death and those who sin will surely die unless Jesus saves them.
But this life of the spirit, our true homeland, can become more real than our earthly existence while death still has so many victories. Jesus died for all, but read again the secret, plainly stated by Paul: we will not all have to die to be changed! God changes our bodies in an instant (His instant, not ours!), at the time of the last message, the last trump sounding. Those dead in Christ rise in the spirit first, where Jesus went and is now with the Father.
We are to consider ourselves dead in Christ, our flesh fully taken over by His rulership through the mind of Christ, which we have. We are eligible to be among those who remain on this earth, changed without dying, when He fully tabernacles within us:
“For we know that since Christ was raised from the dead, He cannot die again; death no longer has dominion over Him. The death He died, He died to sin once for all; but the life He lives, He lives to God.
So you too must count yourselves dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.” Philippians 1:10-11 Berean
“For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God.” Romans 6:11 Berean
Search the scriptures to see if these things be true and God will faithfully show you His truth by the spirit. If you are trying to understand His spiritual words literally by your carnal mind, you will not see or understand all truth. The bible is a spiritual book, full of signs, parables, and metaphors. Jesus used spiritual language in His ministry. He spoke many things that can only be understood spiritually.
Jesus said we are the temple of the Lord, to be understood as the place of His kingdom within, where He dwells. His kingdom is spiritually within us, not a literal place in the earth that we must identify or go to see. Jesus said it can’t be found by visible looking for it. The time of the end is to be like the days of Noah. All went through the flood, but the righteous were preserved on the earth.
The faithful people of God, Noah’s family were those who remained, not the sinner.! Sinners were taken from the earth, perishing in the flood God brought. He promised He would not do it again, with the visible sign of the rainbow as a reminder of this covenant.
"I now establish my covenant with you and with your descendants after you and with every living creature that was with you--the birds, the livestock and all the wild animals, all those that came out of the ark with you--every living creature on earth. I establish my covenant with you: Never again will all life be cut off by the waters of a flood; never again will there be a flood to destroy the earth.’
And God said, ‘This is the sign of the covenant I am making between me and you and every living creature with you, a covenant for all generations to come: I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth. Whenever I bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind.
Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life. Whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and all living creatures of every kind on the earth.’ So God said to Noah, ‘This is the sign of the covenant I have established between me and all life on the earth." Genesis 9:9-17 NIV
God has a plan for all creation, all living things. He has covenanted not to bring destruction to the earth, and specifically not by another flood. All creation is groaning more and more, as man’s dominion brings more death and destruction to all, often through greed and carelessness. It’s one thing for a habitat to be destroyed by people who need it to live.
It’s quite another to do so by poisoning the environment to support a lifestyle that costs others their livelihood, just for financial gain, and then lying about it, as many have. God knows and is about the business of tearing down the refuge of lies we hide within:
“You boast, ‘We have entered into a covenant with death, with the realm of the dead we have made an agreement. When an overwhelming scourge sweeps by, it cannot touch us, for we have made a lie our refuge and falsehood our hiding place.’
So this is what the Sovereign Lord says: ‘See, I lay a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone for a sure foundation; the one who relies on it will never be stricken with panic.” Isaiah 28:15-16 NIV
Those who habitually lie think they can keep doing so and not be exposed or found out.Others in this world wield great power and authority while causing pain, suffering and destruction with their lies. So many lies have been told through the centuries that have caused many a battle, so much death and destruction. It continues to this day, with those who are threatening annihilation to other world citizens because of their desire for power and control.
May God break that stronghold in the spirit that allows leaders to continue their search for personal gain covered by lies and deception! But we also rejoice as the lies we all hide in our hearts are washed away. God has laid this Foundation, the precious Cornerstone of Christ within our hearts. Jesus Christ is the right judgment, the only straight and true plummet line.
All of the lies that men and women are hiding within will be revealed and exposed, stripped away if not already submitted to the Lord for cleansing and purification. If we’ve allowed the water of the spirit to flood in and wash away the earthly lies and deceptions written within us, it won’t harm us, but heal us! This is good news! How could it not be when the final result is that our covenant (agreement) with death is annulled?
Any agreement with death is to be canceled or pardoned, any fatalism, any way we have deceived ourselves that we can sin and still enter in, is cleansed from our hearts. Any lie based on past expectations contrary to His word of life is dealt with, any behavior stemming from the lie that it’s okay though it works death in us, is taken care of. Yes, our destiny is to be made perfect in Him.
The power of death over us is broken forever, canceled by our Lord Jesus Christ. It can no longer rule over us! We welcome Him as our King, returning to conquer all in us and others. He is now working to create true hearts in His own, from which no guile will flow into words.
We are to be free from the bondage of death, fully restored, drawn to Father God and supping with the Son and the Father in spiritual Zion, where is the throne of God’s Kingdom. Hear it again:
“Where, O Death, is your victory? Where, O Death, is your sting?” The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.”1 Corinthians 15:55-57 Berean
Yes, He has already given us the victory over death. Now we must learn to walk in all that He has done. While we patiently await this, God promises to restore our health speedily, for which we also wait. So many precious saints, including those who are given great revelations and understood much truth, have died. Sin brings death and no one can argue that it is still working in our bodies even though Jesus Christ defeated both sin and death.
"The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?" Jeremiah 17:9 NIV
Jesus Christ is not still fighting death or satan except on our behalf. He is the only One who can cure our very carnal hearts, which are the most deceitful above all things. We can neither cure it nor understand it, but God can and does. We have yet to grasp the promise that this includes our bodies. We long for more miracles that heal and restore the body, but this is not happening as it did in the movements of Pentecost in 1901 and 1949.
Here’s just one of many scriptures that promises healing from God:
“Be not wise in your own eyes; fear the Lord, and turn away from evil. It will be healing to your flesh and refreshment to your bones.” Proverbs 3:7-8 NIV
We do believe in and pray for healing in the body for all those who are suffering illness and death. God still does miraculous healings but it is neither automatic nor routine. Oh, that it would be more fully manifested so that death really had no victory! In the spirit, this is so. We are confident we will never die in our spirits, but our souls and bodies still need some work and we cannot deny this.
We have moved past the ministry of the law, placing no confidence in following rules and regulations for deliverance. God’s people have been following the law in one way or another for centuries and what lasting, bone-deep, heart changes have we seen? No one but Jesus could fulfill the law. He did it for us so that He is making His victory part of us, written on our hearts.
This is the only way we can please Father God. He loves us and sent His son to save, not condemn the world. But to actually please Him, cause His heart to sing because of our love and submission to Him—what a privilege that is!
“Now if the ministry of death, which was engraved in letters on stone, came with such glory that the Israelites could not gaze at the face of Moses because of its fleeting glory, will not the ministry of the Spirit be even more glorious?
For if the ministry of condemnation was glorious, how much more glorious is the ministry of righteousness!“" 2 Corinthians 3:7-9 Berean
Who can say they have seen the full glory of the Son in a people, the lasting presence of God dwelling within, swallowing up death completely through His victory? The ministry of death is the law, which was fulfilled with the ministry of the Spirit that Jesus Christ our Lord brought to us. Yet many still walk in the law of religion while seeking God Who is spirit. We have yet to walk in all that He has accomplished, but we surely can hope for what He promises though we have yet to see it all.
What is this ministry of righteousness? Is it not the very life of our Lord taking up residence within us? He is the only Way for us to be righteous—to be right in His eyes. What a glory we have already seen as we gaze into His eyes, hear His words, and seek to live in His presence daily. It is here, on this earth, that we need our tears dried and death to be no more, all our reasons for sorrow gone, as it is already established in the spiritual heavens of our Lord. What a day to come!
“I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them.
They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.’” Revelation 21: 2-4 NIV
Jesus and His Mother
In this blog, I explore the unique and sacred relationship between Mary and Jesus, reflecting on Mary's experiences as the mother of the Son of God and her role in biblical narratives. I delve into the scriptural accounts of Mary's journey from receiving the angel's message of Jesus' miraculous birth, to witnessing His life, miracles, and crucifixion, emphasizing Mary's faith and the profound impact of her son's destiny on her life.
Have you ever wondered what Jesus was like with Mary, His mother? Any mothers who have sons, particularly as the eldest, may be particularly curious about how this holy mother and Son relationship unfolded. He was her firstborn Son and the Son of God. What a calling she and Joseph were given! After Jesus’ birth, we continue to hear about Mary but little about Joseph. Perhaps it is because the disciples clearly knew Mary and could record more about her and her experiences.
As a mother of one precious beloved son, given to me by the Lord after years of longing, I have been most interested in what can be gleaned from what is written about Mary’s relationship with Jesus. I trust some of you share my curiosity and potential from learning about this most critical relationship, whether you have a son or not. Any mother who cherishes their child, as she did, has a great influence on them.
Mary, the mother of Jesus, was human, and by her own account, not at all noteworthy, certainly not a person of stature. She was living an ordinary life when God called her to be the mother of our Savior and Lord. Mary’s humanity was given to our Savior so that He could overcome all, going through all life’s struggles with the rest of us. Those who deify Mary do away with Jesus’ ability to connect with us as God in a human.
There are only glimpses, not a great deal about Jesus’ lifelong relationship with Mary, His mother. Let us explore the unfolding of Mary’s parenting from the scriptural accounts. Their story begins when Mary gets the heavenly message that she will become pregnant by the Holy Ghost, with the long-awaited Savior of the world:
“The angel said to her, ‘Do not be afraid, Mary; for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall name Him Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David; and He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and His kingdom will have no end.’
Mary said to the angel, ‘How can this be, since I am a virgin?’ The angel answered and said to her, ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; and for that reason the holy Child shall be called the Son of God. And behold, even your relative Elizabeth has also conceived a son in her old age; and she who was called barren is now in her sixth month. For nothing will be impossible with God.’
And Mary said, ‘Behold, the bondslave of the Lord; may it be done to me according to your word.’ And the angel departed from her.” Luke 1:30-38 NASB
Mary believed God’s word about the baby He would place in her womb. She really was His first convert! She knew from the beginning who Jesus was, bowing in obedience and worshiping God. The angel encouraged her by reminding her that He does the impossible, such as her aging, barren cousin, Elizabeth, who had finally conceived and was now six months pregnant.
Mary immediately surrendered to God’s word to her. Even though there was much she did not understand, she did not question or debate. Mary next visited her cousin, a wise decision as they were able to encourage and support each other with what God was accomplishing in both of them. Mary also received a further strong word of confirmation from the holy spirit through Elizabeth:
“When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit. In a loud voice, she exclaimed, ‘Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb! And why am I so honored, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?
Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord’s word to her will be fulfilled.’” Luke 1: 41-44 Berean
Here’s another key from Mary’s example: when we believe what the Lord tells us about having children, what they will be like as revealed by the spirit, we are most blessed. It is our faith in what God said. Many a parent has held on to the words God spoke over their child while that same child showed no signed of this for years. When God tells us something about our child’s future, we can believe without question, as Mary did, until it is fulfilled.
Perhaps God has not said anything personally to your spirit, either directly or indirectly, about your children. There remains many words of God in the scriptures we can take to heart about them. He blesses to the third and fourth generation of those that love Him. When we train up a child in the way he should go, when s/he is old, s/he will not depart from it. Teach them to honor thy father and mother that it may go well with them. And many more!
Oh the promises of God are powerful when we believe. And He is an ever present help when our faith falls short. In Mark 9, the disciples brought to Jesus a grieving, desperate father of a son afflicted with a dangerous demonic spirit that brought harm to the boy since a toddler. The disciples had not been able to heal the boy:
“And they bring him to Him. And perceiving Him, the spirit straightway violently convulses him, and, falling on the earth, he wallowed, frothing. And He inquires of his father, ‘How much time is it since this has come to him?' Now he said, ‘From a little boy. And often it casts him into the fire also, and into waters, that it should be destroying him. But if Thou art in any way able, help us, having compassion on us!"
Now Jesus said to him, ‘Why the if? You are able to believe. All is possible to him who is believing.’ Straightway, crying, the father of the little boy said, with tears, ‘I am believing! Help my unbelief!’” Mark 9:20-25 NIV
The father’s faith was challenged by watching his son suffer from birth, as well as the disciples’ failure to heal and deliver the son. Having his precious son made whole was too good to be true to his carnal mind! Jesus honored the father’s honesty as He does for us when we pray with some mixture of faith and unbelief. We can trust the Lord to help our unbelief.
All is possible to him who is believing and He becomes our faith when our own falls short. We rely on the sovereign God to complete our faith for what He says. He stirs up our faith by providing whatever is needed from and through Him, to believe for what we asked. With the father’s honesty, the burden of unbelief is now on Him to correct. It is not on us to work up, pretend, or be dishonest about the state of our faith.
There’s no condemnation here, just as there was no condemnation from Jesus to this broken-hearted father. Jesus saw the man’s heart as well as the terrible condition of the son who was convulsed in front of Him. And Jesus had compassion, immediately healing and delivering the son. Jesus fulfilled the very longing of his heart. What a Savior!
Both Mary and Elizabeth gave birth to sons with holy callings, both sons destined for great work. Both died tragic and painful deaths because of their ministry. What a privilege, along with the incredible pain of losing their sons, both Mary and Elizabeth were given by God. Surely they are honored for their belief in what God told them, sustaining and comforting them in their grief and loss as these events unfolded.
When it came time for Mary to give birth in the lowly stable, wise men came to worship the newborn Baby, having traveled for two years following the star signifying His birth. They also confirmed what the angel of the Lord had spoken to Mary directly and through the prophets.
“After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King Herod, Magi from the east arrived in Jerusalem, asking, ‘Where is the One who has been born King of the Jews? We saw His star in the east and have come to worship Him’…for this is what the prophet has written: ‘But you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means least among the rulers of Judah, for out of you will come a ruler who will be the shepherd of My people Israel’…
When they saw the star, they rejoiced with great delight. On coming to the house, they saw the Child with His mother Mary, and they fell down and worshiped Him. Then they opened their treasures and presented Him with gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh.
After they [the wise men] had seen the Child, they spread the message they had received about Him. And all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them.
But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.” Luke 2:1-2; 5b-6; 10-11;19 Berean
Can you imagine all she might have wondered about with the magi coming to honor her Infant, sharing what God had foretold—about Him? She held the memories of every word said about her Son, still a wee babe, in her heart. She pondered these wonderful things, keeping precious words close within. Most Christian mothers do cherish any word from the Lord about our children, holding them in our hearts, watching and waiting for how God chooses to fulfil them.
Next Mary and Joseph, as was the Jewish custom, took their firstborn infant, Jesus, to Jerusalem to be circumcised and presented to God. The firstborn son is an important position in any family and no doubt Jesus held a significant place in Mary and Joseph’s family as well.
“And when the time of purification according to the Law of Moses was complete, His parents brought Him to Jerusalem to present Him to the Lord (as it is written in the Law of the Lord:
‘Every firstborn male shall be consecrated to the Lord’ and to offer the sacrifice specified in the Law of the Lord: A pair of turtledoves or two young pigeons.’” Luke 2:22-24 Berean
At this baby dedication, Mary and Joseph heard more amazing words from two of God’s prophets. Mary and Joseph were so honored with these words from God’s messengers. One of them, Simeon, had been promised by God to see the salvation of his people before he died. God fulfilled this promise to Simeon as a witness to Jesus’ dedication in the temple. While His parents were dedicating Jesus, Simeon was anointed by the Holy Spirit to speak powerful, confirming words about the destiny of their Son:
“Simeon took Him in his arms and blessed God, saying: ‘Sovereign Lord, as You have promised, You now dismiss Your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen Your salvation, which You have prepared in the sight of all people, a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to Your people Israel.’
The Child’s father and mother were amazed at what was spoken about Him. Then Simeon blessed them and said to His mother Mary: ‘Behold, this Child is appointed to cause the rise and fall of many in Israel and to be a sign that will be spoken against so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed—and a sword will pierce your soul as well.’” Luke 2:28-35 Berean
Simeon spoke of Jesus being a light to the Gentiles as well as a glory to His people Israel. This was long before Paul brought the gospel to those who were not Jewish, a true word, though years passed before it came to pass. From infancy on, Jesus was set to reveal the thoughts of many and He is still doing that to this day. Simeon prophesied to Mary that while her Son, Jesus, would do great things, He also would face adversity and His experiences would pierce her soul—her will, thoughts, and emotions.
Anna, a prophetess of God who was always in the temple, also came forth to affirm that Jesus was the salvation of Israel, the promised Savior they had been waiting for.
“There was also a prophetess named Anna, the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher, who was well along in years. She had been married for seven years and then was a widow to the age of eighty-four.
She never left the temple, but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying. Coming forward at that moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the Child to all who were waiting for the redemption of Jerusalem.” Luke 2:36-38 Berean
There was much for Mary and Joseph to meditate about regarding Jesus, their firstborn. Like any Christian mother, Mary remembered these words from God about her Son, cherishing them in her heart as she and Joseph raised Him. How marvelous it is for parents to receive a word from the Lord when their child is dedicated to Him!
Mary surely wondered at what was predicted as well, how and when God would bring these prophetic words into reality. Regardless of not knowing how all these words would unfold in fulfillment of God’s promises about her Son, she remembered them, believed them, holding them in her heart. She must have particularly considered the prediction that her heart would be pierced.
This is the first time something is recorded that hints at His future suffering and crucifixion. Such words had to be overwhelming, concerning as well as joyful. Mary is forewarned that many will come against this precious One laying in her arms. So, Jesus’ mother and father took these words with them as they returned to their home in Galilee to raise the Son God had given them.
As Mary cared for first, the baby, then the toddler, then the little boy, she knew who He was. She surely could see God in His eyes as well as the wisdom beyond His years that He displayed. Jesus grew up differently, showing forth His Father’s nature even as a child.
“… the Child grew and became strong. He was filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was upon Him.” Luke 2:40 Berean
Jesus, the God-man, was different from the beginning. There are not many young boys who display wisdom and grace as they grow, but it is not surprising that our Lord did. Though wisdom usually comes with age, He surely was wise beyond His years because of Father God. Having a Child who displayed grace and wisdom from His heavenly Father made Him unique among His siblings and friends.
As time went on, the next occurrence of Mary’s involvement with Jesus is as a precocious twelve-year-old being taken to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover. The family did this every year, so the trip was nothing new to Him. What Jesus did there could sound like an independent twelve-year-old going his own way rather than following His parents’ directives, but that was not His intent:
“Every year His parents went to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover. And when He was twelve years old, they went up according to the custom of the Feast. When those days were over and they were returning home, the boy Jesus remained behind in Jerusalem, but His parents were unaware He had stayed.
Assuming He was in their company, they traveled on for a day before they began to look for Him among their relatives and friends. When they could not find Him, they returned to Jerusalem to search for Him. Finally, after three days they found Him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions.
And all who heard Him were astounded at His understanding and His answers. When His parents saw Him, they were astonished. ‘Child, why have You done this to us?’ His mother asked. ‘Your father and I have been anxiously searching for You.’
‘Why were you looking for Me?’ He asked. ‘Did you not know that I had to be in My Father’s house?’
But they did not understand the statement He was making to them. Then He went down to Nazareth with them and was obedient to them. But His mother treasured all these things in her heart.
And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man.” Luke 2:41-52 Berean
Apparently, by this age, Jesus was not expected to be by their side at all times. This time, however, they could not find Him for three days and He’d been missing for four! Can you picture Mary and Joseph leaving for home and not realizing until a day later that Jesus was not among the group with whom they were traveling? Think of how frantic any parents would be if their child disappeared in a city they were visiting for this long!
How astonished Mary and Joseph were when they found Him in the temple, asking questions and understanding the teachings of His Father! He was equally surprised that they would not know where He was. He must have displayed an intense interest in the things of God for Jesus to expect His parents would know where to find Him. Of course He had to be in His Father’s house!
After this, Jesus reassured His earthly parents with His obedience. It was not an intentional rebellion nor a habitual behavior. He had never done anything like this before and there’s no account that He did anything like it again. But Mary…she was continally putting all of this together. She did not know the details, but she knew Who He was and that He was destined for great and powerful things.
If the entire future of Jesus had been revealed to her at the time of these events, she would not need to ponder their meaning. Mary again treasured these things in her heart. She remembered, she thought and prayed, going over them before God, recalling and seeking to understand. Like any mother with an astonishing child, she was amazed and puzzled by all that was said and happening concerning Him.
When God gives us glimpses of the path He has for our children, godly parents take hold and nurture that. Mary witnessed many significant events in the life of Jesus recorded after this before Jesus’ mother appears again in the scriptural accounts. Jesus grew up and,being the eldest of the family, went into the family business. He worked with His father Joseph as a carpenter while living His life as a young adult in the Jewish community.
Jesus apparently lived an ordinary life, much like any other young Israelite males, raised in all the Jewish traditions and laws. There is nothing more recorded for the years up to the time Jesus was 30, the age of maturity for Jews. But unlike most pictures of Him, He was not likely a blue-eyed, blond-haired handsome man who stood out in the crowd. The prophet Isaiah said:
“He grew up before Him like a tender shoot, and like a root out of dry ground. He had no stately form or majesty to attract us, no beauty that we should desire Him.
He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief. Like one from whom men hide their faces, He was despised, and we esteemed Him not.” Isaiah 53:2-3 Berean
Jesus was not known, was not meant to be known by His outward appearance. Isaiah seems to say Jesus was not externally a standout among HIs people. We don’t know if Jesus talked with His mother during these years about what God was doing in His life. We don’t know when He left the carpenter work with Joseph. We know little of his relationship with his brothers and sisters. It is just not provided for us in the scriptures.
As time grew close to the revealing of His ministry, however, He passed the temptations in the wilderness and was baptized by John. John’s words confirmed that this One is Jesus Christ the Savior:
“Then Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John. But John tried to deter him, saying, ‘I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?’ Jesus replied, ‘Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness.’ Then John consented.
As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened, and he [John] saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him.
And a voice from heaven said, ‘This is my Son, whom I love; with Him I am well pleased.’” Matthew 3:13-17 NIV
How astounding was John the Baptist’s faith in this cousin he’d known all his life! And note that God was pleased with Jesus before He did one miracle! Surely Mary heard about these words though there is no record that she was present when they were said. There is no account of Jesus talking with His mother during these events. Some also speculate that Joseph died during these years, but there is little to go on about Joseph’s fate.
It is nice to think that Jesus stayed close to His mother, particularly if Mary was widowed, but we just do not know. Jesus did have siblings so Mary was busy raising her other children, making it less likely she was with her Firstborn in His later adult life until His ministry was revealed.
But Mary reappears as the central figure in the beginning of His ministry unfolding in the sight of others. There came a wedding in Cana, to which Jesus and His disciples were invited. His mother, Mary, was also attending this wedding.
“On the third day, a wedding took place at Cana in Galilee. Jesus’ mother was there, and Jesus and His disciples had also been invited to the wedding. When the wine ran out, Jesus’ mother said to Him, ‘They have no more wine.’
‘Woman, why does this concern us?’ Jesus replied. ‘My hour has not yet come.’ His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever He tells you.’” John 2:1-5 Berean
This is a significant passage worth pondering in our own hearts. There are several key things implied by this short exchange between Mary and her Son, Jesus. First of all, Mary knew He could turn the water into wine when she asked Him to do it. Even though He said it wasn’t their business and it was not yet His time, she told the servants to do what He said. Was this her considerable faith in the One God had allowed her to birth? Had He done these things before in private?
Mary asked and was completely confident that Her son would answer her request. Even though Jesus mildly chastised her because it was not yet time for God’s glory to be revealed through miracles, His mother ignored His verbal protest by confidently turning to the servants to direct them to do whatever He told them to do. They did as He said and the wine was the best that the wedding guests had consumed!
As the gospel of John states, Jesus thus revealed His glory, and His disciples believed in Him.
“Now six stone water jars had been set there for the Jewish rites of purification. Each could hold from twenty to thirty gallons. Jesus told the servants, ‘Fill the jars with water.’ So they filled them to the brim. ‘Now draw some out,’ He said, ‘and take it to the master of the banquet.’ They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine.
He did not know where it was from, but the servants who had drawn the water knew. Then he called the bridegroom aside and said, ‘Everyone serves the fine wine first, and then the cheap wine after the guests are drunk. But you have saved the fine wine until now!’
Jesus performed this, the first of His signs, at Cana in Galilee. He thus revealed His glory, and His disciples believed in Him.” John 2:6-11 Berean
Jesus did His first known miracle, turning the water into wine, at His mother’s request. Her absolute faith that He would do as she asked is obvious. Mary had confidence that her Son, Jesus, would listen to her and that all would unfold when the servants did what He told them. How she must have anticipated the day that the rest of the world would know and believe, as she knew and believed all those years.
What a waiting period to see the fulfillment of God’s great promises for Her firstborn! Are you waiting for God to fulfill precious promises He has put into your heart about your children? Are you ready by the spirit to do whatever God requires to be a witness to the Father’s will being fulfilled in them, no matter the wait for their fulfillment? Jesus was thirty so it wasn’t a short wait!
Mary had sustained faith in Jesus, Who He was and the plans for His life she’d heard about. Because she had cherished all that had already been said and happened in her heart, her faith was ready. Jesus and His mother appear to have remained close despite His age and independence. In several writers’ exploration of the meaning of this passage, however, they suggest that Jesus, the Son of God and man, was rude to His mother, rebuking her for asking such a thing.
But we do not know the tone of voice, the look on His face as He said this to His mother. Jesus would not be the first adult Son to mildly protest at a mother’s request but, regardless, she pays no attention to her Son’s response. She proceeds as if He had agreed, confident that He would do what she asked. She seems to know and count on her Son’s heart, a closeness where she fully expected Him to grant her request.
Mary was the first to know who He was, with an intimate knowledge that His earthly parent, Joseph, did not have. It seems fitting that she was at the beginning of His ministry, when His glory was revealed. In the days to come, the gospels record how she was able to follow His ministry. How her heart must have rejoiced at the miracles and the acclaim, the growing belief of others that Jesus Christ is the Savior!
These were wondrous, precious times. The disciples knew her as a fellow believer who followed Jesus as her Lord right along with them. But then we begin to see more than one sign of the changes to come. The crowd of followers who thought He was to be their earthly King became disillusioned. They did not understand His spiritual kingdom. His teachings in parables had deep spiritual meaning that they had no ears to hear.
The Hebrews of that time were looking for a literal restoration of the Hebrew nation as rulers of the age. They longed for an earthly deliverer, someone to free them from Roman domination. We learn of the growing resistance and rebellion in the crowds around Him, fueled by jealousy and fear from the established Jewish religious leaders of the time. Many could not see past their earthly hopes, rejecting the ministry Father God had given Him and its importance for the future of all mankind.
Jesus’ words are spirit and truth, and most did not have a heart prepared to hear Him by the spirit. The Jewish leaders knew He had no respect for them because He spoke of the evil that was in their hearts. Jesus was a threat to their authority and leadership. Jesus never rebuked sinners, but He spoke often and bluntly about the hypocrisy of these leaders, revealing their heart motives. Many reject the One who speaks truth to them, revealing the sins in their hearts.
We begin to see, following the miracle of feeding the 5,000, many falling away. It wasn’t enough that He ministered and did miracles. Jesus ministered this word about being the bread of life and the wine, His blood, shed for all. They fell away due to unbelief. Most did not understand what He meant, not having spiritual ears to hear.
“So Jesus said to them, ‘Truly, truly, I tell you, unless you eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of Man, you have no life in you. Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. For My flesh is real food, and My blood is real drink.
Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood remains in Me, and I in him. Just as the living Father sent Me and I live because of the Father, so also the one who feeds on Me will live because of Me. This is the bread that came down from heaven. Unlike your fathers, who ate the manna and died, the one who eats this bread will live forever.’
Jesus said this while teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum. On hearing it, many of His disciples said, ‘This is a difficult teaching. Who can accept it?’ Aware that His disciples were grumbling about this teaching, Jesus asked them, ‘Does this offend you? Then what will happen if you see the Son of Man ascend to where He was before?
The Spirit gives life; the flesh profits nothing. The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life. However, some of you do not believe.’ (For Jesus had known from the beginning which of them did not believe and who would betray Him.)
Then Jesus said, ‘This is why I told you that no one can come to Me unless the Father has granted it to him.’ From that time on many of His disciples turned back and no longer walked with Him.” John 6:53-66 Berean
Jesus had gone too far in the estimation of many of His followers. Without the holy spirit, His words were baffling, sounding strange indeed! They did not comprehend His words were spiritual rather than literal. It was not what they were hoping for. The further we walk in the things of God, understanding Him spirit to spirit, the less other religious people understand us, the greater the price—and the eventual reward!
But Mary and one of His brothers, James, continued to walk with Him, soon witnessing further betrayal, this time coming from Judas. Though Jesus always knew what was in the hearts of His disciples, it had to hurt deeply to have those with whom He walked so closely fall away, one of them betraying Him. He turns to the remaining disciples and asks if they are going to leave Him, too:
“So Jesus asked the Twelve, ‘Do you want to leave too?’ Simon Peter replied, ‘Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life. We believe and know that You are the Holy One of God.’
Jesus answered them, ‘Have I not chosen you, the Twelve? Yet one of you is a devil!’ He was speaking about Judas, the son of Simon Iscariot. For although Judas was one of the Twelve, he was later to betray Jesus.” John 6:67-70 Berean
Here’s the beginning of sorrows, a heavy, burdensome time for our Lord. What a sad statement He makes here about whether the others would leave Him, too. It came from His heart as He anticipated what was to come. The human part of our Lord felt all the feelings that others feel when those they love, their closest friends, betray and abandon them. How painful for Jesus yet He still washed Judas’ feet at the Last Supper, calling Judas ‘friend’ at the time of Judas’ betrayal.
As the multitudes left Him and many no longer followed Him, Jesus knew the time for His death by crucifixion was drawing near. How many with great ministries need to know that Jesus understands about changes like this, when God moves on and their former work for Him is done? God did not lift humanity from His only Son. He required this humanity so we would absolutely know Jesus was like us in all things except sin.
Jesus is our model, our example. He surely understands and accepts Father God’s changes. His earthly work showed that a man with God fully in him could overcome sin to be united with His Divine Father. He had to suffer as all humans suffer, so He understands what it is like for the rest of us. We need to know that our High Priest has gone through what we do on this earth.
“Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to what we profess.
For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who was tempted in every way that we are, yet was without sin.
Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” Hebrews 4:14-16 Berean
Jesus passed through various realms, the heavens, to complete His work on earth. God is not tempted but Jesus was. Jesus knows. He knows! He does understand what we are going through because He has been there.
And now Mary’s heart was beginning to be pierced with what Her son was experiencing, just as the prophets foretold! We can identify with her mother’s heart aching for what Her Son was suffering. Even though she knew God’s highest purpose for Him, she does not appear that she know how it would unfold. It would be most difficult to bear to watch your beloved Firstborn be rejected and betrayed, suffer and die young, even with knowing God’s plan for Him as the Messiah.
Any parent who knows their child is destined to die for any reason can particularly relate to the heart of Mary during this time. Christian parents have children born with a condition that will take their lives far too soon know what this is like. Others watch their beloved children suffer and die in multitudes of ways on this earth, including children who are believers and called to ministry. Parents whose children are called to dangerous occupations also live with the daily awareness of heightened risk of losing them.
Jesus is able to comfort all through each fear, sorrow, and trial of this life because of what He experienced. We can go to our Lord with great confidence, knowing that He really does understand. Though Jesus had God the Father with Him, He was not spared any of the suffering humans go through. He was also denied many things most of us have in this life on earth.
It was for this very purpose He came through the womb of a Mary, an unknown young woman. God could have sent Him another way, but Father God wrapped Himself in the human flesh of Jesus through His mother, Mary so we can connect with Him. God so loved the world that He gave His son to save us! Think of it! Though He was divine, Jesus knew what it was like to be tired, to be hungry, to be weary of unbelief, to lose fellowship and companionship, and to grieve at close relationships changing.
Jesus was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. He knew what it was like to have no spouse, no children, like many others had to enjoy. We cannot limit or excuse our lack of growth and change by saying, “Well, that was Jesus and He was God. We don’t have what He had.” We do not yet have all that Jesus had, the fullness of Christ within to be face to face in intimate fellowship with the Father as He was, but He made the way for just that.
If Jesus did not know the sufferings humans go through, the scriptures would be false. Through His humanity born of Mary, Jesus is the Firstborn of many brethren. His work is to bring us back to the Father Who is to dwell among us.
“And we know that God works all things together for the good of those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose.
For those God foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brothers.” Romans 8:28-29 Berean
Mothers often feel deeply about what their children are going through. Mary, a faithful follower as well as His mother, went through it all with Him. How she must have cried with dread and feared for her Son in the coming days before His arrest. Certainly, she prayed for Him. Mary had to bear up under all that was unfolding in Jesus’ life.
Many parents say they would rather suffer pain, affliction, and illness themselves than watch one of their children do so. As His mother, Mary bore the pain and suffering He was going through right along with Him. It had to be very difficult, regardless of faith in the plan of God and the outcome of all the suffering He was to experience.
Jesus did tell His disciples that He would be crucified at Passover but their reactions when it happened reveal how little they understood what they had heard from Him. How could they know? No human had seen such vile events unfold for such an innocent man. Understandably, they wanted Jesus here on the earth with them. They loved Him and the days of His ministry had been glorious.
Perhaps, too, some of them thought He would use His power to avoid any actions that would come against Him. But even Peter did not understand that Jesus must be crucified. He did not comprehend that the Jewish leaders and community, wrongly blamed as a people for centuries for His death, were being used by God to accomplish His salvation of the world.
What the Jewish leaders influenced the people to do was evil. They truly were of their Father, the devil. But God had a higher plan, crucial for all of us, meant for good, defeating the evil intent of the Jewish leaders and the crowds of that era. Mary was aware of this but what a devastating witness to His horrific sufferings she had to endure.
After our Lord’s ordeal in prayer to His Father in the Garden of Gethsemane, Judas, His betrayer, and the Roman soldiers came:
“Friend,’ Jesus replied, ‘do what you came for.’ Then the men stepped forward, seized Jesus, and arrested Him. At this, one of Jesus’ companions drew his sword and struck the servant of the high priest, cutting off his ear.
‘Put your sword back in its place,’ Jesus said to him. “For all who draw the sword will die by the sword. Are you not aware that I can call on My Father, and He will at once put at My disposal more than twelve legions of angels? But how then would the Scriptures be fulfilled that say it must happen this way?’
At that time Jesus said to the crowd, ‘Have you come out with swords and clubs to arrest Me as you would an outlaw? Every day I sat teaching in the temple courts, and you did not arrest Me. But this has all happened so that the writings of the prophets would be fulfilled.’
Then all the disciples deserted Him and fled.” Matthew 26:50-56 Berean
Jesus calls Judas friend despite knowing the betrayal to come. Jesus was not forced to go through the arrest, torture and crucifixion. He had a choice. Jesus also knew Judas had to do what he did. He tells his disciples that it must happen this way, it’s the Father’s will that events unfold to fulfill the scriptures about Him. But what an overwhelming, lonely and painful time when Jesus could not even expect His closest companions, His disciples, to stay with Him.
Jesus knew His Father could save Him but would not, because of the higher purpose He was to fulfill. Jesus chose obedience unto death, submitting His own will to fulfill all that was required of Him. How this speaks to us when we watch our beloved children suffer in life, some even facing a painful future. How we struggle in knowing God could save them from this heartache but their destiny is not to be saved in this life.
For many parents in these circumstances such as Mary’s, He enables them to endure, to submit their will to God’s, to be obedient through sufferings. None are alone as Jesus was truly alone in the spiritual preparation of the greatest event in history. All desert Him as He is arrested, every single one.
It was a fearful time and, really, what could any of them do against the power of the Roman authorities? Jesus knew they would abandon Him, He understood, and yet it still hurt.
“Then Jesus said to them, ‘This very night you will all fall away on account of Me. For it is written: I will strike the Shepherd, and the sheep of the flock will be scattered.’” Matthew 26:13 Berean
Jesus endured the cruel treatment of the chief priests who directed soldiers to whip Him. His body was shredded with 40 lashes while Jesus stood stoic before the crowd that was demanding His crucifixion as a criminal. He said little as He was mocked, ridiculed, stripped and whipped, then put on the cross to die. The disciples were around but there is not an account of Mary being specifically present, though she likely was nearby.
Mary had been one of Jesus’ followers from the beginning, though it does not say she was there when He was subjected to all of this. Eyewitness or not, think of the anguish Mary went through as she had to helplessly witness her Son being so cruelly treated and dying painfully on the cross. Surely Mary recalled the words of Simeon about her soul being pierced as these events unfolded.
This speaks to the hearts of every Christian parent who has had to watch undeserved suffering and death happen to their children. Even though Mary knew the prophecies, she knew what Jesus said would happen, she did not know, likely could not imagine, the details of all He would endure for our sake. This had to be more than most of us could bear.
Yet Mary was at the foot of the cross, watching her beloved Son dying a painful death, as recorded in the gospel of John:
“Near the cross of Jesus stood His mother and her sister, as well as Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus saw His mother and the disciple whom He loved standing nearby, He said to His mother, ‘Woman, here is your son.’
Then He said to the disciple, “Here is your mother.” So from that hour, this disciple took her into his home.” John 19:25-27 Berean
Our Lord Jesus Christ was mindful of His mother, Mary, even while dying on the cross. He had concern and compassion for her, asking her to see John as her son and John to accept her as his mother. He knew His mother would want to stay with those who also believed and followed Him. If she was a widow, she may no longer have had a home to which she could return or anyone to care for her. She had other sons, but other than James, none are mentioned as disciples.
Mary is not mentioned at the time of His appearing before He ascended into the Spirit. But she was there, along with Jesus’ brothers, in the Upper Room on the day of Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit fell:
“When they arrived, they went to the upper room where they were staying: Peter and John, James and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James son of Alphaeus, Simon the Zealot, and Judas son of James.
With one accord they all continued in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers.” Acts 1:13-14 Berean
Here it says brothers so more of Jesus’ siblings must have joined this group than only James. Mary was a mother, like many of us, and Jesus was her Son. Their earthly relationship is something we can understand and identify with as parents. We also recognize the people of Jesus’ time did not have the holy spirit to guide and direct them through these difficult days, to illuminate their understanding of such momentous spiritual events until after His resurrection and return to them by the spirit.
What more can this relationship between Jesus and His mother teach us today? It reminds us that our Lord Jesus Christ was really a man, born into a family, raised by a mother who loved and nurtured Him, taught religious principles and trade by His earthly father, Joseph, working in the family business. As we look at these accounts, the reality of flesh and blood people going through this time comes into sharper focus.
Those who have children who suffer and even die though innocent of wrongdoing particularly realize that Mary, too, experienced this. We are in awe of what God required of Mary and respect her obedience and faith in Jesus Christ as the Savior of the world.
Consider the words of this beautiful and powerful song:
“Mary, did you know that your baby boy would one day walk on water?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would save our sons and daughters?
Did you know that your baby boy has come to make you new?
This child that you delivered, will soon deliver you.
Mary, did you know that your baby boy will give sight to a blind man?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy will calm the storm with His hand?
Did you know that your baby boy has walked where angels trod?
When you kiss your little baby, you kiss the face of God?
Mary, did you know?
Mary, did you know?
Mary, did you know? Did you know?
Mary, did you know? Mary, did you know?
Mary, did you know? Mary, did you know?
Mary, did you know? Mary, did you know?
The blind will see, the deaf will hear, the dead will live again.
The lame will leap, the dumb will speak. the praises of the Lamb.
Mary, did you know that your baby boy is Lord of all creation?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would one day rule the nations?
Did you know that your baby boy is heaven's perfect Lamb?
That sleeping child you're holding is the great, I Am.
Mary, did you know? (Mary, did you know?)
Mary, did you know? (Mary, did you know?)
Mary, did you know? Oh…)”
(Mark Lowry / Buddy Greene / William Barclay / Wayne Buchanan / Courick Clarke / Savory Lamont).
We also wonder, asking our Lord Jesus, “What did Your mother know?” We who are mothers especially ponder this before God. Though there is only a little revealed in the word, we can glean from what is there that she was a most important person to her Son as well as an incredible woman of faith.
May God bless us in our contemplation of this mother-Son relationship.
Wealth in God
Here, we talk about the importance of not being complacent in one's spiritual journey, warning against the 'Laodicean condition' of lukewarm faith found in many religious groups. I urge believers to seek a deeper relationship with God, overcoming fleshly desires and embracing trials as opportunities for growth, ultimately striving for the true riches of God’s kingdom.
Would you believe that spiritual wealth comes from overcoming our own fleshly nature in order to inherit the fullness of future rewards of the kingdom? God does not intend for His beloved people to be satisfied with less than our full allotment of all He has promised. There is an abundance in God to be accessed through the holy spirit. We are cautioned not to think we have it all, not to become complacent or satisfied with our religious status, knowledge or spiritual wealth.
God prefers us to be either cold or hot, no fence-sitting in Him! He judges us to remove our heavens, those spiritual places in which we have lived, shaking up our earth, our fleshly understandings of Him, until we move on. Hear what He says in Revelation to the church in Laodicea:
“To the angel of the church in Laodicea write: These are the words of the Amen, the faithful and true Witness, the Originator of God’s creation. I know your deeds; you are neither cold nor hot. How I wish you were one or the other!
So because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to vomit you out of My mouth! You say, ‘I am rich; I have grown wealthy and need nothing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind, and naked.
I counsel you to buy from Me gold refined by fire so that you may become rich, white garments so that you may be clothed and your shameful nakedness not exposed, and salve to anoint your eyes so that you may see. Those I love, I rebuke and discipline. Therefore be earnest and repent.
Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in and dine with him, and he with Me. To the one who overcomes, I will grant the right to sit with Me on My throne, just as I overcame and sat down with My Father on His throne.
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” Revelation 3:14-22 Berean
Riches in God are granted—all the fruit of His kingdom, full of the love, peace, and joy He promises along with wisdom to live His way. But it is not the wealth of this world and there are qualifications for these rewards. We are commanded to overcome all of the ways of this world, as Jesus overcame all. When we think we have it all already, He is outside the door of our hearts, knocking to be let in, to invite us to dine on the rich delicacies of His words of truth and love.
Overcoming means to be successful in dealing with an obstacle or a problem. What is it that we are to overcome? We are to overcome our flesh nature as He did. Thinking we are spiritually rich and don’t need anything more is a condition that can be in the hearts of many of God’s leaders, instilling it in their followers. This Laodicean condition of being lukewarm is found today in many religious groups, churches, denominations and other Christian groups of believers who think they have arrived and already have it all.
When we believe we have it all, it stops us and those under our influence from further growth into His fullness. What a deceptive way for the enemy of our souls to stop us in our tracks so we progress no further. Many of us have experienced times of our own Laodicean condition, perhaps our periods of peak spiritual experiences leading to joy and contentment. This often is followed by a season where God has to deal with us so that we move on. God knows how to do this with each of us when we are willing.
We may recall former times during our incredible walk with the Lord when we thought we had it all and had arrived with the best God has to offer. In our hearts, we became self-satisfied, rather than God-satisfied. Sometimes we were even self-righteous about what God was giving us and our group’s special place in His kingdom. We are attending the best fellowship, hearing the top preachers, going to the primier conferences, reading and studying with all of the prominant ministers, teachers, authors and speakers of the day, attending every gathering where we hear the spirit is moving.
So, we put down our roots in that fellowship with with its beliefs and doctrines instead of in God! Looking back at past exciting and precious times with God’s people in various gatherings where He was moving, we have deep gratitude that these were times where our spiritual walk was radically changed. Though many of our former gathering places are no more, we recall with love and appreciation our Elders, now on the other side, who filled our storehouses with God’s own seed of righteousness and revelation, growing the character of Christ within.
Friends and fellowships, ministry and hardship, joy and suffering have been shared with precious brothers and sisters who were just what we needed at the time. Though we may have thought we would last forever together at the time, God allows the fires of change to come, so we lose contact with them on this earth. God knows. One way or another, God moves us on. When we were reluctant, He knew how to remove the blessings from that season until we had to move on or others moved on from us.
While many men and women of God were allowed, in fact, given the task of writing on the hearts of God’s elect for just these times, they come to an end as God calls us to go further, come up higher. The love and gratitude remain along with wise teaching deposited our storehouses, building a strong foundation in Him. These are words by which we now live, ever learning to understand these teachings in more depth by the spirit. We never move past eternal truths, but we do go on to know Him in all the richness of His character.
There are multiple opportunities for growth as well as obstacles He allows on our path to becoming like Him. We can welcome these obstacles rather than thinking we are being mistreated by God when they happen. When we have ears to hear, we move on, longing for more of the Lord, rather than clinging to the old while it dies around us.
“Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith:
That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death; If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead. Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I follow after if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus.” Philippians 3:8-12 KJV
If we plant our stakes in our current spiritual realm, insisting this is where it’s all happening, God will arrange for us to be moved on through circumstances around us. He brings a famine of the word where there had been plenty. He allows a dry season to take away the rain of His spirit. The fellowship we are attending, for various reasons, develops division and strife, falters and is destroyed. Then, we finally hear the call to come up hither, ringing in our spirits and answer it.
Some worry that they are dishonoring their elders and teachers by going further, but those who have hearts for God would want us to go further than they did. Our elders, just as the saints of old, saw much in God’s promises in which they were not allowed to participate. We now move higher, go further than our elders saw and told us about. There’s always a word of revelation through God’s messengers about God’s truths that sees far beyond what obedient servants could see or experience themselves during the times we are following the holy spirit’s directives.
Revelation is God revealing His secrets, showing us His ways, the heart of the matter of things to come. That’s why the book of Revelation, a book for now that has been only a future hope for many, is a most important one for us to understand. We are destined to eat with Jesus our King and God Our Father the words of that book. Unfortunately, Revelation has been a controversial and misunderstood book, with much confusion and strife about what it is saying, how much to spiritualize it, or what to take literally, resulting in lack of unity about its meaning.
Written to God’s people, not to the world, John the Revelator is revealing Jesus Christ, laying out the coming times of judgment. Revelation begins with all that believers must go through to overcome. Peter witnesses to the suffering that overcomers are called to experience as the process to bring us into the realm of the spirit where the Lord Jesus Christ rules with His Father.
“But if you suffer as a Christian, do not be ashamed, but glorify God that you bear that name. For it is time for judgment to begin with the family of God; and if it begins with us, what will the outcome be for those who disobey the gospel of God?” 1 Peter 4:16-17 Berean
We are where His judgment is happening now, in the hearts of His people, and that’s a good thing! As Christ is formed within us, He is making His abode inside of us, where is His kingdom. The time of our change has already begun and is ongoing for God’s called and chosen people. We can learn from the seven churches in the Book of Revelation, each told that God is aware of their deeds, their acts in His name. He sees what is in their hearts, what misses the mark of His high calling to dwell in His kingdom.
The messages to the seven candlestick churches found in Revelations 1-3 to His own reveal a spiritual pattern of the progression of the saints, the true church on earth. It was not written only to those seven groups of believers in actual cities of the time. Nor is it written to all those others who are in need of repentance and the refining of their natures. These messages are to us, God’s people! We are told there is a great blessing in both reading and believing the words of John the Revelator.
The Revelation’s candlestick churches are described with spiritual language for essential things we need to know in this Day of the Lord. He tells each church to repent, to change. Each church representing a realm of spiritual experience must hear Him if they have spiritual ears to do so. They must overcome all of the flesh realm in order to enter in. It’s a corrective word for each church realm that has been hindered along the way to His fullness.
The only church He does not tell to repent, chastise, or warn that He will remove their candlestick, the light of His presence, is the church of Philadelphia. Why? Because He sees that this church of brotherly love, despite their limitations, has His love in their hearts. He tells this church who is practicing brotherly love from their hearts to hang on to that little they have. The word given by John the Revelator to the church of Philadelphia starts out the same as the word to the rest of the seven churches, but ends differently:
“I know your deeds. See, I have placed before you an open door, which no one can shut. For you have only a little strength, yet you have kept My word and have not denied My name. Look at those who belong to the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews but are liars instead. I will make them come and bow down at your feet, and they will know that I love you.
Because you have kept My command to persevere, I will also keep you from the hour of testing that is about to come upon the whole world, to test those who dwell on the earth. I am coming soon. Hold fast to what you have, so that no one will take your crown.
The one who overcomes me will make a pillar in the temple of My God, and he will never again leave it. Upon him, I will write the name of My God, and the name of the city of My God (the new Jerusalem that comes down out of heaven from My God), and My new name.
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” Revelation 3:8-13 Berean
The church of Philadelphia has an open door because of their brotherly love. An open door means they can go forward, go further in God. God saw something different, something worth preserving, to build upon in their hearts. Those who have brotherly love can go on into perfection. God opens the door before them because this quality of brotherly love is a keeper!
This church has kept the Lord’s commandment to love one another. The church in Philadelphia is on the path of life toward the love of God fully dwelling in a people. All the other churches had conditions from which they needed to repent, to submit to the fires of God to be further purified into His nature, but the Philadelphia church is told to hold on to what they have.
Jesus tells this account of two sons that furthers our understanding of how God sees the progress of character change in His own:
“Who then is the faithful and wise servant whom his master has put in charge of his household to give the others [in the house] their food and supplies at the proper time? Blessed is that [faithful] servant when his master returns and finds him doing so. I assure you and most solemnly say to you that he will put him in charge of all his possessions.
But if that servant is evil and says in his heart, ‘My master is taking his time [he will not return for a long while],’ and begins to beat his fellow servants and to eat and drink with drunkards; the master of that servant will come on a day when he does not expect him and at an hour of which he is not aware, and will cut him in two and put him with the hypocrites;
in that place there will be weeping [over sorrow and pain] and grinding of teeth [over distress and anger].” Matthew 24:45-51 Amplified
The evil servant surely is not holding on to what the Master has given him to feed and bless others. God will deal with us when the mercy and grace He extends to us is not freely extended to others. This is the refining of our nature into His nature. God is so good to us, providing all that we need, all the time, and with the most important gift of the spirit within. This is wealth in God!
We are to share all of His provision, His goodness, love, and mercy, with others as God leads. Thankfully, none of us get what we deserve because of the grace and mercy of our Lord. We can freely give to others, without fear or favor, as He does. God does reward the humble and appreciates a truly repentant heart. In the beatitudes, our spiritual “constitution” for kingdom life, Jesus says:
“Blessed (happy, to be envied, and spiritually prosperous—with life-joy and satisfaction in God’s favor and salvation, regardless of their outward conditions) are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy!” Matthew 5:7-8 Amplified
It may appear that this promise means that when we are merciful to others, God will be merciful to us. The judgment we hand out is said to come back to us as well. But what of the deeper meaning that the merciful will obtain more mercy, God’s heart of mercy? Practicing what we preach does build that same character within. This promise goes beyond acts of mercy towards others in order to please the Lord to becoming His mercy in the Earth. What a reward!
“And we know that God works all things together for the good of those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose. For those God foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brothers.” Romans 8:28-29 Berean
How different is God’s definition of wealth than our earthly understanding of it! There are believers who are destined to be like Jesus Christ our Lord. Father God predicts many to be conformed to His image. That is true riches! Yes, money does bring more choices in this world and God does bless some of His people He chooses to trust with natural wealth. But riches from money and possessions are neither a requirement nor a sign of God’s favor.
God may bless us with material wealth for the purposes of our calling in His kingdom. Riches may come after our hearts please Him but it is not what we are to seek. We are not to even worry about it, which is a much bigger challenge:
“Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles strive after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.
But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.” Matthew 6:31-33 Berean
Jesus tells His followers to be different from the unbelieving Gentiles of His day. When they worried about or focused on all the things they needed, He reminds us that these will be provided as we seek His kingdom first. God and His ways are to become infinitely more valuable than rubies or gold to us. The true wealth of God is available to us in the spirit.
Those who have plenty are not more loved or pleasing to God because of it. And those who have little are no less loved by Him or being punished by our heavenly Father. As the first stanza of this song states:
“Lord, You are more precious than silver;
Lord, You are more costly than gold;
Lord, You are more beautiful than diamonds;
And nothing I desire compares with You.”
(Author unknown)
God works within us so that all our earthly desires fade in comparison to our desire to be like Him. When we have Him, we have everything we need. We can always go to Him when there is lack. We are to be made like Him, in His image and likeness, and He is love. When perfect love dwells in our hearts and swallows up our being, we are no longer subject to the torments of human fear. We are delivered into the wealth of His kingdom where no unclean thing may enter, and God’s perfection reigns within us.
Hear it: the wealth that we seek begins with being in awe of our God’s nature, His character. How can we be in awe of our God when we don’t know much about who He is, let alone comprehend the decisions He makes? We are to have an awesome reverence of our Father, not to fear and mistrust what He will do. God is completely and wonderfully able to remove fear from our hearts as we seek Him. Do we believe it?
As reverence is present and fear is being removed, we continually draw near to Him in love, learning of His ways, not just His acts. Would any of us really prefer the wealth of this world instead of God’s peace? Yet far too often we have sought the things of this world, regardless of our faith in God. When you grow up with little, there may be a drive to accumulate, an envy of those who seem to have all they want in addition to all they need.
God teaches us that our desire, even yearning, for outward but unnecessary things is hollow and ultimately dissatisfying. Things don’t change what is inside us, in our hearts. Many a rich person in this world is most unhappy, never satisfied or at peace with what they already have. Christians look forward to God working in us so that we can join Paul in saying.
“ …I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. I can do all this through him who gives me strength.” Philippians 4:11b-12 NIV
“Of course, godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into the world, so we cannot carry anything out of it.” 1 Timothy 6: 6-7 Berean
To be content with what we have, to value godliness as great gain, such is wealth! Consider that some Christians do not have their needs met on a daily basis. It takes amazingly mature faith to have nothing, yet continually trust God for every need, but many Christians have to do that daily. It’s easier for those of us who have a measure of prosperity to be content.
Some of us may not have the deprivation others do and yet, God makes no qualifications to this scripture. We are born into different circumstances, different human heritages, and differing abilities. It’s God’s business who He decides to make of each one, including Christians who are rich in the things of this world. It is His choice and not something we are to complain about.
“But who are you, O man, to talk back to God? Shall what is formed say to Him who formed it, ‘Why did You make me like this?’ Does not the potter have the right to make from the same lump of clay one vessel for special occasions and another for common use?” Romans 9:20-21 Berean
We are not to seek these things, to focus our energy on getting material things in this world, to. have a fear of lack, a scarcity mentality. We learn that He provides what we need, but not all that we want. He is able to removes the fear of suffering that is such a part of the human condition. In fact, we begin to celebrate the suffering He brings as we believe it will create in us the Christ within.
We welcome life’s adversities when we know the fire of His presence, the blood He shed for us, is working for good in our hearts of flesh. This is true riches, lasting and eternal, of far more value than any things for which we may seek. It is about faith in Him, not the desires or actions of humans. How we long to know Him not only in the fellowship of His suffering but, along with Paul, be found as living epistles of His righteousness:
“…be found in Him, not having my own righteousness from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God on the basis of faith.
I want to know Christ and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to Him in His death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.” Philippians 3:9-11 Berean
We carry the cross in our daily lives as circumstances put our own ideas and ways to death. What a wonderfully compassionate, understanding, and patient Teacher our God is with His own! He is willing and able to give us the wealth of His kingdom, the riches of His nature. Some of us are just hard learners! We are not the potter, but we are the clay of His workmanship.
The very most satisfying place is being in the center of His will, even when it is the only peaceful place in the heart of a storm of events. God loves His called, chosen, and elected people that He has been preparing through the ages for just this Day of the Lord. We who are called to be sons and daughters of the most High know that the Father’s strictest disciplines and most important lessons show forth His love and purpose for us.
We need never be afraid of Father God or in terror of His actions. When we do find ourselves overwhelmed with fear and anxiety, God understands and will heal and deliver us with His comfort and mercy, making a way of escape as we ask. God is able to bring the merciful into the lives of those who received no mercy to show forth Who He really is.
Yes, there are many not my will, but Yours be done moments like Jesus had at Gethsemane, but we will never struggle with nor face what Jesus was called to do. He did it with the Father’s strength within for the joy that was set before Him. And we can become more and more like the One we worship and adore as we enter into His sufferings. Our Lord understands our crises as turning points in our lives, opportunities for change and growth that is lasting, written in our hearts.
This is the gold of His kingdom, the true wealth of His nature worked in a people, eternally His own. What God teaches in this way becomes a part of us, written in our hearts. We can count on the promise of God to have the mind of Christ. God is more than able to create in us a clean heart, something that no money or possessions can create. He alone enables us to love the unlovable as He does.
Who else sees every heart and loves all regardless? We are enabled, empowered to share the wealth of His kingdom with others. We show forth the riches of His nature of love and mercy, comfort and patience, having faith that He has everything we need in His hands. Should we be granted riches in money and possessions, we are free and generous in the sharing of them.
We all have a change of heart by learning God’s heart in any matter. Surrender is the ultimate desire of our Lord’s heart, not ever “giving up” in despair. God will have a people with no guile, whose words and behaviors match in displaying His nature of justice and truth, mercy and love, sharing and showing forth the wealth of His kingdom.
Such wealth is found as we follow our Lord Jesus Christ wherever He goes:
“They follow the Lamb wherever He goes. They have been redeemed from among men as firstfruits to God and to the Lamb. And no lie was found in their mouths; they are blameless [have no guile.]” Revelation 14:4b-5 Berean
Being One in God
In this blog, I explore the diverse forms of Christian worship, highlighting that worship styles vary among individuals and denominations, often influenced by tradition, culture, and personal preference. I emphasize that true worship is less about the specific form or music style, and more about the sincerity and heart condition of the worshipper, with God seeking those who worship in spirit and truth.
Our Lord addresses many issues in His word concerning intimate relationships between men and women. He knew we’d have challenges living with each other. Everyone does, regardless of culture, beliefs, or even gender. We are created in His image and likeness, male and female, and we are made one in Christ Jesus. We all are created to desire being loved. God knows this and He made us this way!
Without wisdom, many confuse love with sexual attraction but there is so much more to the quality of love that God intends for couples. God is a great Counselor during difficult times. We may cry out, “But Lord, it’s so hard. S/he is not doing what You said…”. Well, yes. Who told you it would not be hard on our flesh to do what God asks of us, to be willing to do His will, in His way and in His time? When God calls two to become one in Him, the joining process takes time, determination, and commitment.
Family life is so important that people create families around them when they do not have their own. With the great variety of families today, the two-parent family is no longer the majority. There are thousands of single parents, often not of their own choosing. Both fathers and mothers find themselves raising children alone, for various reasons, while having to work to meet family needs. Many families are unable to provide for their family needs if only one parent is working.
Some of us have callings, gifts differing that lead us to work as a career. Others are able to have one parent devote their work to raising of children. Some speak critically out of disrespect, judgment or envy when they do not recognize the Lord’s calling on another, male or female. We can choose to be empathic rather than critical with others whose partnerships and callings differ from our own. God is not a cookie cutter God who has created us all to travel the same path.
No one has the ideal family, and God has it all covered! Why is it that when we observe the differing paths that others take, it seems to threaten our own choices? We judge by outward appearance and hold up one standard of how things should be with women and men. But not everyone has the same array of choices due to income and opportunities. Many women who must work have hearts that yearn to be with their children rather than at work, grieving lost opportunities while their children are growing up. The exhaustion from work and other home responsibilities also robs their time off with their children.
Professional women called to careers have similar challenges. Finding a balance in work and home is difficult for those in ministry as well. How is it we think we know what others should do when we do not know their circumstances nor how God is dealing with them in their lives? God desires us to treat others as we would like to be treated, whether it is returned or not. We need not criticize and judge others who serve the same God though their paths differ from ours. God takes care of it all.
When the stereotype is about the emotional, irrational, incompetent female, it does grave injustice to all the competent highly skilled women, at work and in the home, who are called to differing paths of leadership based on the gifts God has granted them. Husbands may appear to fare better in such gender prejudices but that is also untrue. When the stereotype is about the sloppy, forgetful and clueless husband of many a family sitcom, it does not fit with husbands who develop patience and tolerance by being more organized, neat, practical, and efficient in the home than their wives are.
In the 50’s it was “Father Knows Best,” but after that, society, as represented by entertainment and social media, completely flipped. Men have been portrayed as clueless, incompetent, and lacking familial wisdom that their wives display. There’s no true wisdom or balance in society and the tendency to overcorrect extremes is evident. Let us recall that all are made in the image of God:
“This is the book of the generations of Adam. On the day that God created man, He made him in His own likeness. Male and female He created them, and He blessed them. And in the day they were created, He called them ‘man’. Genesis 5:2 Berean
We were first created in the same body, united as one being called man, in the likeness of God Himself. When God saw that Adam was lonely, He separated His creation into male and female bodies, making womb-man or woman. You can count on Adam especially delighting in how Eve was different. He needed a helpmeet, the foundational purpose of marriage. We all need companionship and help and God prepared for that.
God is the Master Joiner, the best one to choose whom we will love and create a home to be with and enjoy life together. Our own hearts can be most deceitful when doing our own choosing. When we ask our heavenly Father to choose our spouse, waiting upon Him to do it, our marital prospects for a blessed future increase. It also helps if others are praying for wise choices to be made when the time comes.
There will be challenges and issues, of course and some meant-to-be Christian relationships will also fail in this life. Not every partner or couple is enabled to stay the course, but when God puts two together, this is the lasting relationship that ideally is never to be severed. Even when God does the joining by His choice for us, sustaining our union together, we still have moments of bafflement or discord, finding ourselves reminding God that this person was His idea for us!
“…and the two will become one flesh.’ So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate.”…Mark 10:8-9 Berean
The Concordant Literal New Testament puts it this way:
“‘…and the two will become one flesh.’ So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate.” Mark 10:89 Concordant Literal
Here is the foundation: God intends to put us together. Some people in relationships were not put together by God. They did not ask God nor follow the leading of the holy spirit in their choices. Their intimate relationships are not based upon God’s joining by the spirit but by their own ideas and desires. Other factors were more important in drawing them together. We are directed not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers, but two Christians can also be unequally yoked.
Just because a married couple sits beside each other in church does not mean they are equally yoked in God. There are couples where one is a nominal Christian who attends church occasionally out of duty, to please their spouse, or for social or business purposes without heart or hunger for spiritual things. Their spouse, meanwhile, is passionately in love with the Lord, totally committed to His ways, and essentially walking alone in their commitment to God. Is this not unequally yoked?
Was God leading this marital choice or was there an assumption that because both are Christians, it must be His idea and plan? This is a critical life decision. When we deeply love another who is not God’s choice, it is so very difficult. “Whom God has joined together, let not man put asunder,” (Matthew 19:6) underscores that it is God’s job to join us together in Him. These are the relationships that are sustained and should be, between Christians in marriage.
Other relationships reveal the lack of shared spiritual foundation, lasting for a time or a season before God causes one or the other to change direction or just fade away. In these matters, God is more merciful than Christians who make divore into the worst sin, shameful and disqualifying to any believer to whom divorce happens. Jesus said it is not ideal but stated that it keeps happening due to the hardness of our hearts.
Others outside the relationship may not know whose heart was hardened, whose actions led to divorce. God may even release some from the marriage vows when there is gross infidelity, violence, or active opposition to the spiritual life of the Christina spouse.When our hearts are soft, teachable within, the person in some marriages who ends up in a prison house may hear God’s directive to leave.
As the scripture also states, He releases us from unbelieving partners if she or he leaves. God forgives us our errors, including marriages made in foolishness, youth, or other unwise reasons not ordained by God. But some Christians seem more ready to forgive a murderer than a divorced person!
”But if the unbelieving depart, let him depart. A brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases: but God hath called us to peace.” 1 Corinthians 7:15 KJV
What wounds we add to others when we think we know what someone else should do and how they have missed God according to our rules! We also do not know His long-term purpose for a currently troubled marital situation, where some prescribe divorce as the answer and others insist that Christians should always stay, no matter abuse or neglect that is occurring.
What is God’s will in the matter? He may turn these things for good, for future change when we stay. He may free others from marital bonds that hinder or restrict God’s path for that person. We assume we know, judging those who end up divorced but we can’t know the heart of either by outward appearance despite the inevitable gossip and speculations that arise. We do not know what occurred in the intimate relationship that failed to last.
We know so little about our Christian friends and neighbors within their own households. How can we really know what led a devout Christian to separate or divorce? Out of respect for their former spouse and protection of their children, some do not speak of the issues that led to the divorce. The spouse who was innocent of the cause of divorce may be blamed by those who do not know, but think they do. This ex-partner may be covering their ex-partner’s sin rather than exposing for all to see, causing further harm, particularly to the children.
Unless God reveals the core of the matter to us for purposes of intercession, we need to guard our tongues from uninformed opinions. No Christian plans to marry with divorce in mind. Judgment from Christian brothers and sisters only adds to their loss and grief as they go through becoming divorced. It is His business to put together and take apart, each in His planned season. This is another law vs. heart matter where the divorcing Christian chooses not to share the painful or shameful reasons that led to this decision regardless of the judgment that may come.
Some couples who divorce were not put together by God in the first place. It’s truth, though resisted by those who insist that Christians should follow the law of never divorcing. Many who end up divorced were young in either age or faith, not serving or being led by God at that time. Hardness of heart covers many painful, harmful circumstances and behaviors, betrayals occurring with difficulties that seem unsurmountable as peace and love is destroyed in the home.
Children do suffer in divorce, but many also suffer from unhappy, even violent relationships between their parents. Who are we, really, to decide from the outside what another is directed to do by God? There is nothing we do that is beyond the love and forgiveness of God, including marrying outside of His will or divorcing when it seems impossible to reconcile. The Lord has an eternal vision that is more important than the law or Christian rules.
When we are led by the spirit, that higher law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus, God, in His mercy, ends some relationships that are harmful or never should have happened. Alternately, God is surely able to sustain the obedient, believing partner while He does His work on the other. Nothing is impossible with God, but change happens more rapidly with two willing hearts to address problems. But submission to the Lord can hold one in place while the other’s heart is changed, though it may take years.
God knows all hearts, which relationships have a good foundation or not, what situations and partners will change. God also grants patience and love to those Christians in relationships where change is so very long in coming. Then we must recall that all things work together for our good when we love the Lord and are called according to His purposes.
There are times when God releases a believer from a painful or even dead marital union in order to fulfill His future calling and purpose in their lives. In His mercy, God forgives wrong choices in marriage, as He does other choices from our past.
“So any person who knows what is right to do but does not do it, to him it is sin. ... Therefore sin is still in the one that knows to do good and does not do it.” James 4:17 NIV
It is sin when God says not to be married to someone yet we proceed to do so. When we do not know God’s way, when we choose wrongly due to immaturity, impatience, surface attraction, or other factors, and the relationship cannot be sustained, that person did not know to do good. God is always able to do repair work. He is not caught by surprise by our choices in life. God can change any heart!
But it’s better to be obedient first than risk the potential sacrifices later should that change never happen. Fortunately, some choices we thought were our own turn out to be God’s hand in our lives, whether we knew that at the time or not. God always has His hand on people, some of whom have no clue He is there! Many have faithful intercessors, including parents and grandparents, who have been asking God to make this most critical choice for their loved ones who are seeking a spouse.
God does answer prayer for this choice and for any challenges that follow it. Loving intercessors also are a wonderful support for any couple going through troubled times. And when fellowships judge someone who is divorced as unworthy of serving God among them, it adds further wounds. These are all fleshly ideas coming from the world, not the Lord.
So what is the answer? Being equally yoked by God’s spirit is God’s best, His ideal for marriages. When God chooses the partner, we are yoked together in Him with His best choice for us. Not the perfect person, but the perfect person for us! God’s perfect person has the key qualities we need in a helpmeet to walk together with Him in this life. Our joining in Him keeps us tethered when the union is strained—that three-fold cord is not easily broken.
That does not mean the qualities we need to balance us out in this life are always appreciated! Sometimes these are the very qualities that rub us the wrong way as we live together, until God changes our viewpoint to think and consider like He does.
“Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” Philippians 4:8 ESV
Some Christians find it easier to focus on what is excellent and worthy of praise than others, but if God said it, we can all do it. Setting our will to focus on these qualities more than the fault or lack in our spouses enhances our love and appreciation of each other. Praying and thanking God over a list of good qualities when it’s become difficult to appreciate the spouse changes our viewpoint to what is good, the strengths our partner brings.
These are often the flip side of some of the qualities that occasionally annoy us. Is our partner sensitive or too emotional? Structured or controlling? Spontaneous or unreliable? Laid back or lazy? Same traits or characteristics, but the first is a positive way to understand that particular quality and appreciate it in our lives. Consider how we benefit from these differences to make us a stronger union. A laid-back (not lazy) partner is good for one that is passionate (not driven). The practical, common-sense partner balances out the imaginative dreamer.
God help us change our viewpoints! God is in charge of the destiny of His creation, who is the right one for us, choosing more varied paths for people than we realize. Our uniqueness is a beautiful thing, showing forth God’s creative genius. God’s best for His own precious sons and daughters in lasting relationships is to be put together, joined, united by God. Many of us pray for years that God will make us one as He promises is possible, and yes, at some times we pray more passionately than others!
Some differences between couples are more difficult to bear than others. These are the areas that require negotiation, compromise, and acceptance as we draw upon God’s love and wisdom in the relationship. God teaches what is hard-wired in our patterns and what is able to change through God’s intervention. God can change anything, but His work may be in accepting what is rather than praying or striving for change.
In fact, this is the very wisdom of the Serenity Prayer! Change what we can (ourselves), accept what we cannot change (others) and have the wisdom to know the difference (God). God is more than able to let us know what is a permanent aspect of our spouse’s nature—and it is likely the part that will cause the most spiritual growth for us over time. Over time, we come to appreciate the very qualities that formerly irritated us. After all, pearls are formed from irritants!
What rarely works is setting out to change our partner ourselves, rather than allowing the holy spirit to do so. Most of us are willing to change but rarely does anyone appreciate someone trying to make them do so! Instead, God refines us, our fleshly ways, and our ability to grant forgiveness and mercy when that spouse of ours is being difficult. We learn to cover our spouses in love, not rehearsing faults to ourselves, reporting them to others or even to mentioning them at all.
What a discipine that is! We learn to guard against words that cause division, generating lasting conflict, along with bitterness so apparent in many marriages. We also use our good sense of humor from Father God to ease the friction that may arise. Our life partners are a blessing as well as an instrument of spiritual growth. God is very efficient in bringing an end to our fleshly ways, using our most intimate partner in life to refine and change us:
“As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another.” Proverbs 27:17 Berean
While this is not specific to marriage, it certainly applies! We do get sharpened and refined, as we live with our spouses and rub against each other. Yes, there is friction, but when submitted to God, rather than getting out our own knives to carve away at the other’s flesh, the inner qualities of God seen in our marital union grows. Some of our spouses might even say that living with us has definitely made them more godly!
Agape love brings the oil of forgiveness and peace, making things go more smoothly. God’s words to husbands and wives, which we are exploring here, are the foundation of marital life for Christians, but generalizations about what a marriage should be that are not based upon God’s design are just human opinions. There are many patterns of happy marital unions in God’s kingdom, some of which would not appeal to everyone, but the Lord as the foundation makes it work.
Some unions start out more compatible, while others less so. Part of marital growth and compatibility is learning to blend what each partner brings rather than insisting that our partner be more like “us…our parent…society’s ideal…our friend or neighbor’s spouse.. images in society…whoever.” It is impossible to talk about everything beforehand that arises in living together. Marriage equals growth, but some are surprised that growth is required along with love and acceptance.
Each spouse has some things we bring into relationships that we believe to be the right way to do things, big and small. Often we don’t even realize we have these assumptions going on underneath until they show up as conflict. There are jokes about the small things like how the toothpaste tube is to be squeezed or other habits as well as those larger issues such as patterns of communication, who does what work needed for home and family, expectations around celebrations and holidays, expressions of love and affection, and many many other important relationship areas.
When unexplored shoulds are applied in a Christian marriage, these do damage. Whether they come from others or show up in marriages because of learned spousal or gender roles, they divide, weaken and conquer in resentment and anger rather than unite and connect in love. God’s wisdom and understanding is available to guide and direct us to live in increasing compatibility, accepting each other’s differences as gifts rather than irritants.
We learn through God to enjoy and appreciate each other and the incredible richness of human life together. We surely cannot rely on man’s wisdom or advice, even when some say it is just common sense. Common sense says “Absence makes the heart grow fonder” while also saying “Familiarity breeds contempt.” Neither is absolute or godly wisdom. God’s wisdom is the only thing we can count on. Being led by the holy spirit is the path to contentment and joy.
Our Lord created us for relationships, intending that we would enjoy our relationship with Him and with each other. The spouse who is able to love their partner and enjoy being with them more than with any other has been given a great gift, indeed! God is love, and He is the expert on marital love as well as every other kind of love required to grow up into in Him. He has all our differences in background, childhood, values, habits, family traditions, and beliefs covered.
God knows the needs, the lack that our partner has when our needs are not met. We need not allow our focus to be pulled to those differences and away from God. It’s human nature to focus on what’s wrong more than what’s right, but we are not of the flesh, but of the spirit with Christ dwelling within. As someone said, we learn to focus on what is strong, not what is wrong. Unfortunately, humans seem addicted to bad news and that’s what the media sells. Though there are the occasional feel-good stories included these days, it’s not typically the good news that makes the headlines.
What sells the news in any format is the bad news. People seem to enjoy, even be drawn to a bad report. But this is not God’s way:
“But the wisdom from above is first of all pure, then peace-loving, gentle, accommodating, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial, and sincere. Peacemakers who sow in peace reap the fruit of righteousness.” James 3:17-18 Berean
His wisdom applied in marriages is at first pure. Pure wisdom is without guile, selfish motives, or intent to manipulate. That takes a mature Christian! There is no hidden intent or game-playing behavior found in honest hearts seeking to be joined in Him. His wisdom growing within us always has the heart intent of peace, being gentle and accommodating. We are not to be peacemakers in the world alone, but peacemakers created by God to live with our spouses in unity.
God, who knows our partners best, grows our understanding so we may live together in the precious companionship of kingdom love, joy, and peace. These qualities of the kingdom of God are nurtured and grow within us in our marriages. When God chooses to put together partners whose personalities and habits are similar, understanding may evolve more easily over time. Such couples are best friends right away, often with fewer conflicts than when God puts opposites together.
God knows who we need, whether it is someone much like ourselves or more in the opposites attract category of relationships. God even has us covered when we did not surrender to His choosing in a life partner. Whether God is in charge of a couple’s choices or not, there are times when lack of understanding brings discord, overwhelming one or the other spouse. That’s why it’s recommended for Christians to share a faith in God.
The Holy Spirit is the tie that binds, our strongest commonality in union with another:
“And if one prevail against him, two shall withstand him; and a threefold cord is not quickly broken.” Ecclesiastes 4:12 KJV
The Concordant Literal provides a more clear visual picture of God’s plan for unity, particularly in expanding this passage:
“Two are better than one because there is better reward for them in their toil. For, if they fall, one can raise up his partner; But woe to him when there is no second person to raise him up.
Also, if two lie together, it is warm for them, yet for one, how can he keep warm? And if somebody can overpower him who is single, then two can stand firm in front of him who attacks.
A threefold thread cannot quickly be pulled apart.” Ecclesiastes 4:9-12 Concordant Literal
A literal three-fold cord isn’t easy to pull apart—try it! For Christians united in marriage by God, our three-fold thread is made of each partner and Jesus Christ. God has compassion for those who do not have someone to raise them up and keep them warm, to stand firm with them when under attack. But is this not an awesome description of a godly partnership? When God puts two people together as His choice for both, this union cannot be quickly pulled apart, divided to emotional or physical separation despite what comes.
These man-woman-Jesus Christ unions are those that God Himself has put together. It is like gold to find the one God has prepared for you, regardless of what either of you have gone through before. It doesn’t even matter what you think specifically brought the two of you together when the foundation is build by God. He is that sure foundation. We all need someone to lift us up and keep us warm, stand with us when we are under attack from the enemy of our souls.
God is the changer of hearts, He is the only unifier of flesh and blood into One in Him. Love is the strongest changer of hearts and He is love. We pray most sincerely to God that our spouse be changed more into His likeness and image, in accord with God’s principles of love and respect in marriages. Then the challenge becomes to leave it with Him! We can influence our partner by our behavior but the response is theirs and God’s.
Our focus must be on our own hearts, what God wants changed in us. There is no need to assign blame, which is quite different from responsibility. We are all responsible for our own actions and choices. Blame takes it further, judging the person, their character and intent as bad, accomplishing nothing to actually solve the issues present. Some of the reactions we get when trying to force our partner to be different are due to inept and even hurtful attitudes revealed in our behavior towards them.
Though our partners may actually want and desire to change, no one enjoys being controlled by angry, withdrawing or punitive behavior that attempts to force change. No one should impose their human ideas of what their spouse should be. As godly men and women, we seek to learn and apply what mutual submission in love means. God has the blueprint that will fit each one of us.
Paul says to submit to one another as unto the Lord. We learn to respond rather than react. Do we submit all of this to the Lord out of gladness and delight or out of fear of judgment and chastisement? It’s clear which God prefers. God is not satisfied with outward behaviors, an appearance of submitting to Him. He is after our hearts! God desires a full heart submission, with love and awe for our Maker and, as a result, for each other.
Submission in Christian relationships is challenging to even bring up as it has been so misused by both men and women. But there is wisdom to be gleaned with a spiritual understanding of God’s meaning. Peter spoke to Christian wives to submit themselves, just as He directed husbands to love their wives. This is between the heart of the individual and God to work within. Nowhere does it state that husbands are to make them do so, nor that wives are to demand their husbands to love them.
Nowhere does it say that every man is to force every woman in fellowship or elsewhere to obey males in general. The higher principle is love, with the standard of mutual submission to one another done in the heart that desires to love as Go loves. Read it again. It does not say what the carnal mind of humans has added into these passages. The husband is not to demand the wife submit, but to wait on the Lord for God to work this in her heart. The wife is not to complain or manipulate the husband to demand that love be given.
These heart matters are for the holy spirit to work out. When it is a law, it brings a curse. After all this male headship is a part of the curse. Where there is no more curse, there is no male or female in Christ Jesus. Those who take this attitude, male or female, are assuming a distinctly different attitude than Jesus did. Jesus spoke and demonstrated far more about serving each other in love than dominating another because of one’s gender.
When we serve each other in love, what we do outwardly may look the same, but the thought and intent of the heart is to bless and please the one we love. If I love to wait on my husband at times though he does not demand it or if my husband loves to treat me like a queen though I do not expect it, is this not honoring to the Lord? It’s our business, not a law someone else and their expectations puts on us to rob us of our spiritual freedom.
Gifts are freely given, and love makes no demands. God does not demand love, He freely gives it. He draws us to love Him, but He does not demand it. Love is not earned, nor should it be doled out as a reward for good behavior. That’s the law and it creates death. Our submission is first to God, our Lord and Master. Is it God’s way for husbands to demand that their wives submit instead of leaving this heart work to God? Is it the Lord who is causing wives to shame and blame their husbands for their lack of love?
God could demand that we all love and submit to Him, but He did not. He loves the heart that loves Him willingly and draws us all through His nature of love. There are limits and God surely has discipline for us, but the motive is always for our good. Would God have us use any scripture to justify or excuse wanting one’s own way at the expense of another? Is our Lord pleased when we use His word as a weapon of control, to expect to be be waited on and served, to demand having things our way?
This is selfishness and pride, not God’s character at all. Jesus Christ came to serve and we are to serve each other in marriage. There is no one pattern because there are differing challenges. Flesh makes laws about things that only God can accomplish within us. Each partner may have strengths in dealing with aspects of marital and family life that complement their partner who is not strong or gifted in that area. These may sharply differ from the division of roles and responsibiilities we grew up witnessing with our parents.
We are different, times change, and so do marriages. Some women are married to unbelieving husbands, bringing particular issues to the marriage. It can be difficult for unbelieving husbands to accept their wives’ love and time for the Lord more than for them. It is also challenging for the believing wife to refrain from pushing God on to their unbelieving husbands. An amusing cartoon entitled “Joe felt led to go to church,” shows a picture of Joe being dragged there by his wife. We laugh partly because it may hit near the truth!
“ Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human authority: whether to the emperor, as the supreme authority, or to governors, who are sent by him to punish those who do wrong and to commend those who do right.
For it is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish people. Live as free people, but do not use your freedom as a cover-up for evil; live as God’s slaves. Show proper respect to everyone, love the family of believers, fear God, honor the emperor.
Slaves, in reverent fear of God submit yourselves to your masters, not only to those who are good and considerate, but also to those who are harsh. For it is commendable if someone bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because they are conscious of God.
But how is it to your credit if you receive a beating for doing wrong and endure it? But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in His steps.” 1 Peter 2:13-22 NIV
Peter addresses all the ways we can demonstrate love, honor, and submission to the Lord, becoming like Him and bringing His grace into every situation. He states that we’re all required to submit to others, including those over us in authority, regardless of how they are handling themselves. We may suffer unjustly and unfairly, as Jesus did, and God honors that. Our commitment is to pleasing the Lord, not other people.
Wives and husbands may do “it”—this submission that demonstrates the character of the Lord—in differing ways according to each one’s needs. In other words, every believer is required to learn submission to others, not for their sake or position in marriage, but as unto the Lord. And He rewards us with more of His character for His glory. We are all to to bless and serve one another, each of us in our calling in order to enjoy our blessings.
The roadmap of the submit/love balance needs to be understood by the spirit, applied in a far different way than the history of its misuse in religion. Women have and continue to suffer disrespect and abuse in religious circles. Some blame all women for Eve’s deception, for causing sexual immorality, considering women less than, even viewed as servants to men. How can this possibly fit with the heart of God, Who is love and mercy, truth and justice?
Clearly such attitudes are motivated by self rather than love, stemming from fear and lack of trust, not godly love. There’s a balance here, with Paul talking about husbands loving their wives immediately following this directive to wives to submit themselves. It’s easy to submit ourselves to someone who loves and understands us, who is laying down their lives for us as Christ did for the church.
It is not God’s character that insists gender and marital roles be a certain way to be Christian. When husbands try to make their wives submit, particularly through anger and control, it works no better than wives who try to make their husbands love them. Paul also speaks to children submitting to parents and slaves to their masters, fathers to children. The key is God’s emphasis on the attitude of the heart:
“...not in the way of eye-service [working only when someone is watching you and only] to please men, but as slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart; rendering service with goodwill, as to the Lord, and not [only] to men,” Ephesians 6:6-7 Amplified
The word to fathers and masters speaks clearly about the kind of authority God would have coming from the heart:
“Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger [do not exasperate them to the point of resentment with demands that are trivial or unreasonable or humiliating or abusive; nor by showing favoritism or indifference to any of them], but bring them up [tenderly, with lovingkindness] in the discipline and instruction of the Lord…
You masters, do the same [showing goodwill] toward them, and give up threatening and abusive words, knowing that [He who is] both their true Master and yours is in heaven, and that there is no partiality with Him [regardless of one’s earthly status].” Ephesians 6:4;9 Amplified
Oh, that we could heed this guidance in family relationships, to treat children with tenderness and loving kindness, instead of as masters to slaves, recognizing the limits of their development and wisdom. Husbands and wives model godly behavior—or not—to their children. Without submitting all to God the Father through Jesus Christ and His sacrifice, generational patterns repeat the same harm and wounds.
When surrendered to the Lord, however, all of this is training and preparation in serving the Lord from a heart of submission in love, as clearly stated in the following verses:
“In conclusion, be strong in the Lord [draw your strength from Him and be empowered through your union with Him] and in the power of His [boundless] might.
Put on the full armor of God [for His precepts are like the splendid armor of a heavily-armed soldier], so that you may be able to [successfully] stand up against all the schemes and the strategies and the deceits of the devil.” Ephesians 6:10-11 Amplified
Put on all the armor of God to fight our true enemy, which is not other human beings, but the strongholds of lies, deception, and selfishness that live in the hearts of people. Our enemy, including those things in our spouses, is not flesh and blood, but powerful strongholds in the spiritual realm, working against, dividing, and, yes, testing us in the crucible of intimate family relationships.
Satan loves to divide and stir up strife, using deception to cloud the love we are to have for each other. In a related passage in Colossians 3, Paul emphasizes again:
“…Whatever you do [whatever your task may be], work from the soul [heart] [that is, put in your very best effort], as [something done] for the Lord and not for men, knowing [with all certainty] that it is from the Lord [not from men] that you will receive the inheritance which is your [greatest] reward. ” Colossians 3:232-24, Amplified
Yes, everything works for good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose. Allowing God to choose our partner is a great advantage. He knows exactly what each of us need and how to make us one. The best foundation is to be joined spiritually, having similar beliefs and looking to God to refine both our faith and our walk in Him. That does not mean the path will be easy, but being unequally yoked has its own pain and challenges.
In a conversation with a Christian woman years ago, she revealed she was about to get divorced for the third time. She was heartbroken, shamed, guilty, and discouraged, blaming herself and also wondering why God was allowing it to happen again. It was a revelation to her, as a Christian, that she could, and actually needed to ask God to choose her husband! She hadn’t even realized this was God’s heart’s desire to do for her, His beloved daughter. Such an important decision, and yet the God she clearly loved was not at the center of it.
God knows the path of life for each one of us. When God does the choosing, it may come as a surprise that He does not rely on the other person calling themselves Christian. God chooses some who do not know the Lord for His beloved believers’ spouses. There are couples whom God has truly put together, while at the moment, one is not a committed believer. God knows when a heart is prepared to receive Him and will work it out.
Here’s an example from my own heritage. I was blessed to be raised in a Christian home. My parents were married for 56 years, with my father having been a believer since age 11 when he went with his parents to a tent meeting. He and his parents remained faithful servants of God, attending church from that time on, continuing in honor and devotion to God throughout their lives.
When my father was a young man of 25 attending a local youth group, God spoke to him about my mother, also in attendance at that youth group. My mother attended the church where the youth group was being held, so she had a nominal faith and was raised by a believing mother. God said to my Dad, “She’s the one.” Then my father waited on God for a year or more to be certain.
We didn’t know until a few years after my mother died that my father had been so directed in his youth to marry my mother. It’s amazing that this occurred as my quiet, reserved father did not share other examples of being spoken to by God. We were raised under my father’s faith and godly patterns, a steadfast and gentle man walking in what he knew, attending church regularly, reading the bible, teaching godly principles through bible stories at home, obedient to what God expected of him.
God honored that by giving my mother to him. Outwardly seeming to be Christian, my mother actually did not have a personal relationship with God, though she followed my father’s leadership by raising us in a Christian home. Because of my father’s godly leadership and with my mother’s full participation, we always went to church, prayed at meals, and learned about the Bible, observing my parents living with godly values.
My siblings and I all cherish the memory of my father reading Bible stories to us every night after supper on the farm. It is an incredible gift to have a godly gentle father who exhibits the character traits and values of the Lord. For that reason, I did not realize growing up that my mother was outwardly conforming but really did not know the Lord. I also did not understand how much my quiet, gentle father’s faith was the foundation of our Christian upbringing.
My father never spoke of my mother as an unbeliever, though he waited quietly many years until my mother came to know Jesus Christ personally. She eventually got captured by the Lord during the charismatic movement in the 1970’s and began to change by the spirit as she now had a personal relationship with the Christ within. In fact, she changed so much that we adult children noticed it and it influenced us as well!
My parents’ shared values united them through the years, but it was my mother who later went further spiritually, hungering for God, eventually experiencing the baptism of the spirit like her mother had. After my mother was converted, she shared many examples with others of being led of the Lord. Mom was known for her love and wise counsel, her nonjudgmental acceptance of those around her. Many many prayers were said for us, her children, including praying for our spouses.
I thank God for the Christian upbringing we all were given and follow to this day. What a blessing that no one told Dad not to marry Mom because of their differing spiritual commitment. My father was given the incredible gift by God of being told my mother was the one God had chosen from him. He knew she was chosen just for him and faithfully loved her through her life. Their marriage was not perfect, but it surely grew and changed when Mom had her visitation from God!
Only what God says will result in the resolution we seek. Peace is not truly peace when it is demanded of a spouse, enforced by fear or control. God’s love makes no demands, as He gave us free will to follow or not. We are on a path to be more and more like our Lord Jesus Christ, whom God sent as His perfect example. He is always with us and faithful to grant wisdom about being united in God to God’s choice for us.
The Lord will grant this to anyone who asks it of Him. He is inside of us, in spirit, and we can reach out for godly counsel at all times and in all things. We are His.
He alone is able to unite us in Him, to make us one in God.
“God intended that they would seek Him and perhaps reach out for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us. For in Him we live and move and have our being.’ As some of your own poets have said, ‘We are His offspring.’” Acts 17:27-28 Berean
Worship
Here, we talk about the diverse ways Christians worship and the challenges of accommodating various preferences within congregations. I emphasize that true worship transcends specific forms or settings, focusing on the sincerity of the heart and the presence of the Holy Spirit.
Have you ever considered—or even debated about —the right way to worship God? It is an essential aspect of any fellowship with God or with other believers. As in so many other matters, we Christians don’t agree on it. There are many different forms of worship with a great deal of variety in how Christians worship. We typically develop patterns and preferences of worship based on our fellowship and our familiarity, our heritage and traditions.
We worship alone, at home, or with others as God gathers His people to honor Him. Some churches even accommodate preferences in worship by offering a traditional service as well as a praise and worship service, with the distinction being how worship is conducted.The traditionalists have kept to piano and organ to accompany the familiar hymns, old and new, often with a formal choir.
Children and youth seem to lead the change in enjoying contemporary worship styles, using a praise and worship team with guitars, drums, tambourines, and other accompaniment. There has been a gradual change about this through the years, with more and more fellowships adding contemporary worship to engage and bless young people. And some of us seniors enjoy it too! But any pastor or church leader will tell you how challenging it can be to please an entire congregation of worshipers with differing tastes in music, let alone beliefs about what is proper worship in honoring the Lord.
There is also the distinction between praise songs, which are typically free-flowing and joyful, and worship songs that lead us into a quiet, deep reverence of our God. The people of God want to worship Him, but what blesses and lifts us into God’s presence surely differs. Further, worship does not require a religious setting, but that is where most of us have learned about worship patterns and beliefs.
I grew up in a traditional denominational church, singing many well-known hymns there as well as playing and singing them at home with my family. The church choir made beautiful music and those who sang solos had voices that rose in melody and love to God. These hymns of praise and worship by the saints of former times are imprinted upon my heart. Growing up in a Christian family where church attendance was required, they were the best part of church attendance for me.
These wonderful hymns, some hundreds of years old, still ring in my spirit, bringing back memories of the hymns my parents most loved and sang. My father was a Christian from his childhood and his voice singing these and other hymns really blessed our growing up years. My mother sang and played the piano and later, my siblings played music as well. I still love hearing such well-known hymns such as What a Friend We Have in Jesus. This Is My Father’s World, and I Come to the Garden Alone, among many others. And will any of us ever tire of Amazing Grace?
Later, as an adult hungry for God, I was drawn to a nondenominational church that sang only choruses, over and over. In the first few months, I found this strange, repetitive, and uninspiring though I never shared that with anyone at the time! I did not see the point of singing the same words over and over. I didn’t feel God’s presence or the spirit in these wonderful choruses I later grew to love.
How I missed the old hymns and type of worship I was familiar with, so much that after a few months, I almost returned to my familiar denomination. Thankfully, the Lord held me steady until my heart could soften enough to receive the holy spirit to enliven my experience of worship. Receiving the baptism of the holy spirit helped me discover the deep meaning in the spiritual presence of God that these choruses of praise and worship brought.
I gradually began to enter into the worship and praise at my new church, learning how to join in the spirit in honoring our Lord together. But no one ever required me to worship in this way. Not one of them told me how to worship nor made me feel chastised or judged because I did not enter in as they did. They just let the holy spirit do its work. As a result, I spent much of the first six months with this fellowship crying through worship times.
God was softening my heart, making a place for the teachings of the spirit this group had to offer. Soon I felt such a presence of God in the worship that it moved me greatly. It had become easy to be lost in beautiful choruses that had once seemed so repetitive to me. Soon this way of worship, a freedom to express whatever was in us to God, became the most meaningful to me.
Later, I was surprised and honored when the Lord made me the worship leader at this fellowship. It was not a calling I had expected or even desired to have, but He put it within me. Through that, God taught me by the spirit what to sing when. He often placed a song in my heart to start our worship. Then the Lord would lift up the worship into the spirit where He was. I learned how to catch the mind of the spirit, to flow where His spirit led in the song services we had together.
God even released my ability to play the piano by ear through the word of a prophet, so that I could accompany the songs we were singing to the Lord. That fellowship and any guests patiently endured my times of plunking away until this gift was released and refined. No one said to me “Here’s how to lead song service, here are the steps to leading worship,” though others in that fellowship had modeled it and knew how. I had wonderful examples, but once again, they let the holy spirit be my teacher and guide.
I did not realize then the great gift this precious fellowship of saints, and their pastor, Rev. Maxine Plowman, gave me in allowing the Lord to train me, rather than humans. I was learning under the spiritual mentorship of Sister Plowman, my spiritual mother and one of the best preacher and teachers of that time. I was also privileged to learn from the many seasoned ministers who visited us during gatherings of the saints for the fall Feast of Tabernacles 8 day meetings that fellowship annually hosted.
Not only did they bring a powerful word, many were amazingly gifted with songs of praise and worship. They were all different, rarely having perfect voices or demonstrating mastery of instruments. How achingly beautiful was their worship and praise from their pure hearts of love for God. So I learned that God has many troubadours who are gifted with incredible talent to sing and play instruments for Him, whether all of them realize it or not!
These were strongly formative years of my spiritual walk, and how I cherish the memories, though we are now all scattered and that work is gone. I went on to enjoy contemporary Christian songs of worship as well as secular musicians who show forth God’s calling in their lives. He is the creator of music and He has many expressions, much variety in what He uses to speak spiritually.
While some music is immediately recognizable as having absolutely no God-given spirit, so much music of infinite variety speaks to each of our spirits in differing ways. God’s sheep know when His life is flowing from the heart of the musician. Like in other callings, what is in the musician’s heart, what the intent is in the music that is shared, the spirit of it, comes through to bless and uplift us.
Some are clearly anointed to do what they do, whether in spiritual settings or outside of such occasions. God’s own recognize His life in many forms of music. And think how incredible the music of the heavenly hosts must be! Never will there be melody, harmony, and expression of the pure life of God in music like that will be to our ears!
There are many different cultural traditions in the nations where Christians dwell throughout the world. Some of us appreciate a broad variety of forms of worship but that is not so for all other believers. The very thing that touches one Christian’s heart turns another completely off. Humans go through changes and styles, groups and solo worship, ideally with one key commonality: honoring our Lord through the spiritual expression of our love and faith in Him.
I will share a singular experience here that is relevant to this topic of worship. One Easter, I was visiting a small town, unfamiliar to me, staying with a family who were not churchgoers. I wanted to attend Easter services somewhere as it was meaningful to me. The church I chose had an incredible choir, accompanied by skilled musicians. They put on a beautiful musical program, singing songs honoring the resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord.
By that time, I was used to always feeling the Lord when I gathered with other believers. For the first time in years, however, I sat in this church, hearing beautiful music, and did not sense the presence of the Lord at all. It actually frightened me because it was so unexpected. They had beautiful, stunning harmony, accompanied by talented musicians as good as any professional production, with warm and friendly people, but it did not touch my spirit at all.
When I asked God what was happening here, hoping to understand why, He said, “They don’t know me.” Never had it been so clear that the presence of God is brought by the people who come together to love and worship Him. This music was amazing entertainment but there were not enough people gathered in that place who brought the Lord and His spirit to make it worshipful.
God is spirit and when there is no spirit of His life in the worship flowing from hearts who love Him, it is dead. It does not touch the heart, though the emotions may be stirred. Though outwardly making beautiful melodies, sadly, it did not bring the Lord’s presence among us. A joyful noise from less talented believers would have honestly been an improvement.
More than one spiritual gathering is elevated by powerful praise and worship that, listened to later without the anointing, becomes literally making a joyful noise to the Lord. The anointing of God swallows up musical error o lack of talent to produce amazing harmony with the Lord. God is not interested in being entertained or having His people put together an impressive program that lacks His presence.
This is one example of the form of godliness without power, as Paul spoke about to Timothy. Here is what God said in Isaiah:
“Therefore the Lord said: ‘These people draw near to Me with their mouths and honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me. Their worship of Me is but rules taught by men.’” Isaiah 29:13 Berean
“And saying is Yahweh, ‘Forasmuch as close to Me is this people with their mouth, and with their lips they glorify Me, yet their heart is far from Me, and their fear of Me is becoming as the instruction of mortals' teaching.’" Isaiah 29:13 Concordant Literal
Some believe that there should be no such thing as Christian artists who make a living singing and playing songs for their audience. Yet God has many troubadours and they are not all in church. Division and controversy increase when we insist that there is only one way to truly worship God—our way—and attempt to make others take on what is meaningful to us.
Then it is not just differing traditions or preferences in musical tastes, but a judgment that our way is right and others are wrong. Inevitably, division and strife arise. And that is not a heart attitude that can praise and worship in the pure flow of God. When will we learn in all things to look at, consider, and discern the hearts of others, as the Lord does? What does God say about the worship of Him?
What is pleasing to our Lord? Is there only one way to worship God, one right style of words and music that honors Him? When will we we know that it is the heart of believers that is our Lord’s focus, much more so than whether we are worshiping in the right way according to our traditions, musical gifts, level of comfort and familiarity. ? We can sing off-key, we can have not one ounce of musical talent, we can be clumsy and awkward in what we attempt to do with the musical part of our worship, but if the Holy Spirit is present within, it is holy, anointed to honor our Lord and express our love for Him.
Here is what the Lord says:
“But a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth, for the Father is seeking such as these to worship Him. God is Spirit, and His worshipers must worship Him in spirit and in truth.” John 4:23-24 Berean
Let’s take a look at the specific words in this passage. God is seeking true worshipers to worship Him in spirit and in truth. The translation of this passage is remarkably consistent among various versions of the Bible. True means just what it says: worshiping in truth, the foundation of God’s truth. We worship, knowing the truth of who God is. The word worship is from the Greek word “proskunetes,” meaning an “adorer, one who kisses or prostrates oneself in homage, doing reverence.”
Worship is therefor an expression of adoration of our Lord and Savior, a heart condition critical for the outward expression of worshipful music and praise.
Listening to someone who is called to minister in music and song is an incredible blessing, uplifting us from our earthly existence into where He dwells. But even when we do not have any of these gifts, we can still make a beautiful noise onto our God. He looks at the sincerity of our hearts. It must be true worship, worshiping the true God, allowing the spirit of the Holy One to be preeminent.
Worship flows from a heart of adoration, a reverence for Who He is and all that He has done for us. How do we pour out your adoration to our God? Is it confined to one specific form of worship, one type of music, one place, one gathering? Or can you adore God, prostrating yourself in your heart to Him regardless of circumstances? God is saying that the worship He desires is in spirit and truth.
As Paul said to the Ephesians in the above passage, we can sing and make melody to the Lord in our hearts all the time! There is no requirement that it must be done in a religious setting. Adoration of our God can flow out of us each moment as we consider His love for us, this beautiful creation He has made, and the precious people of the Lord as well as all humanity who need Him but do not yet know His love and mercy, truth and justice.
So. Who—and what— do we adore? There are many people we love, things we enjoy given for our pleasure, but who and what do we adore above all? The very first commandment underscores the position God wants in each of our hearts for true worship:
“You shall have no other gods before Me.” Exodus 20:3 KJV
Jesus chastised the scribes and Pharisees, the religious leaders of His days on earth, about this, repeating the words of Isaiah quoted above:
“You hypocrites! Isaiah prophesied correctly about you: These people honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me. They worship Me in vain; they teach as doctrine the precepts of men.’” Matthew 15:7-9 Berean
Worship of God in spirit and truth requires more than lip service, organized forms and patterns of a song service, or the singing of hymns or choruses. What is meaningful to one person holds no spiritual value to another, but the issue is not tradition or doctrine. Doctrine, according to the dictionary, means “a principle or position or the body of principles in a branch of knowledge or system of belief.”
There are fundamental doctrines of our faith that are important building blocks for our walk in God, but He is much more interested in our relationship with Him than manmade requirements that have become doctrines and beliefs. David well knew this:
“For You do not delight in sacrifice, or I would bring it; You take no pleasure in burnt offerings. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and contrite heart, Oh God, you will not despise.” Psalms 51: 17 Berean
For the Israelites, sacrifice of animals as burnt offerings was the acceptable form to worship God and atone for sins. David had grievously sinned against the Lord. He knew all of the traditional ways of Jewish worship, how to bring sacrifices and burnt offerings. David realized that these would not please or delight the Lord after he had grievously sinned against the Lord. God was only interested in a heart change within David. That was what would restore David in His relationship with the Lord.
All through the Old Testament, we see that God often took issue with His people for worshiping other gods. Many times their leaders were removed from authority and their lands given to another because they’d fallen into worshiping idols, influenced by unbelievers around them. Jesus came to do away with this need for repeated sacrifices for our sins, the old traditions and rules of the religious Jews. He fulfilled all of the commandments of Moses, stating:
“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and greatest commandment.
And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.” Matthew 22:37-40 KJV
The new covenant that Jesus brought is a covenant of Love. He said all that had come before His time, the law and the prophets, was superceded, taken over by Love. We are commanded to completely, with all of our being, love the Lord: heart, soul, mind, will. For many of us, this is a lifelong process of in-working so that we truly adore God first and foremost.
What Jesus Christ our Lord did fulfilled all of what was laid out in the Old Testament about God’s people. It comes from a heart that is in love with our Lord, desiring His rule within our hearts above all. Then, we truly delight in the Lord! The critical question is not “what is the best way to worship God?” Instead, it is “What or who do we adore?” Most of us have many things we enjoy but this question, when asked by God, delves deeper into what is most important to us.
God is stripping us of all those things to which we have run through the years. The Israelites are not the only ones who succumb to idols. Examine what our societies promote and hold up as important and it’s easy to see that God is not often at the top of the list. As Christians, we allow many things to take up residence in our hearts, pushing the Lord further and further behind in our love and devotion.
Typically this concerns many good things, including our children or family, our work called by God, great food and entertainment, and even our church and its traditions of worship and praise. Some of these blessings we have run to are ways to soothe and comfort ourselves in place of God. Only God knows what is in each heart. We need not judge one another by the type of music nor the position of our bodies as we worship and praise Him.
Some always lift their hands in praise, while others are acutely uncomfortable to do so, at least in public. Many congregants would not dream of making any noise, let alone be enthusiastically participating in the worship service. Others are expected to do so whenever the spirit moves them. It’s these differing experiences that we can learn to leave with God. God knows what things are a priority for us.
We humans are created for worship but those who do not know God, or when we do not yet know Him deeply, heart to heart, allow enjoyment of many things to grow into adoration, taking priority over the Lord. We believers do not want to be counted as such. God even reveals to some of us that we adore the feeling of worshiping God more than God Himself. It is the best thing in the world to feel God’s presence, but He did not list this as a requirement of worship.
Even when we do not feel Him with us or get that wonderful flood of blessing to our souls when we sing and worship Him, He is with us. He promised to be with us forever. God is busy revealing where our hearts are far from Him, when we still unfaithfully run to things when we are upset or distressed before the Lord. Hobbies or habits are not filling the heart with God. He doesn’t condemn us, He changes us so that our hearts can become true worshipers of Him.
Many of us have sung the song “He’s All I Need,” as we long for it to be so. It’s usually true when we are focused on Him. But we get distracted and busy, with so many choices and, yes, temptations, that draw our hearts away. He loves us still and honors our worship according to the truth we know. Now is the time when He is purifying our desires to have hearts full of adoration towards Him. And even that we cannot do without being in a relationship with Him!
We cannot by works make ourselves, let alone our hearts, be true and faithful. Only God by His spirit can do that. The good news is that He created us to be in a relationship with Him, our Companion forever. God desires us to worship Him in spirit because He is spirit. We connect with Him spirit to spirit. When our spirit knows His spirit, we know when God is present in our worship and praise as well as in many other times in our lives. God dwells in the praises of His people.
This means He promises to be with us as we praise Him. We sense if it is true worship by the spirit or just a form or tradition in which He is not there. When David’s soul was crying out in desperation to God, he says:
“But thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel.” Psalms 22:3 ASV
God is everywhere. He is not restricted to showing up in our lives just when we praise Him. But He sure loves it when we do! The word dwells comes from the Hebrew word “yashab”, meaning “to sit down, to remain, make a habitation.” When His people, called by His name, adore Him with an expression of praise and worship, He comes to stay, to sit with us, to tabernacle in us. We can count on it!
As Peter says, we are His special possession, chosen to declare His praises on the earth.
“But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.” 1 Peter 2:9 Berean
“God, take us further into You. Create in us, Your people, worshipful adoration of You that flows from our hearts as the One we adore.” Amen.
Kingdom Priests
In this blog, I reflect on the spiritual journey of becoming aligned with God's will and nature, emphasizing the importance of redemptive justice, mercy, and personal refinement. I discuss the role of Christians as kingdom priests, the battles against spiritual adversaries, and the pursuit of holiness and unity in Christ, leading to a life free of sorrow and pain as promised in the scriptures.
“Multitudes, multitudes in the valley of decision! For the Day of the Lord is near in the valley of decision. The sun and moon will grow dark, and the stars will no longer shine. The Lord will roar from Zion and raise His voice from Jerusalem; heaven and earth will tremble.
But the Lord will be a refuge for His people, a stronghold for the people of Israel. Then you will know that I am the Lord your God, who dwells in Zion, My holy mountain. Jerusalem will be holy, never again to be overrun by foreigners.
And in that day the mountains will drip with sweet wine, and the hills will flow with milk. All the streams of Judah will run with water, and a spring will flow from the house of the Lord to water the Valley of Acacias.” Joel 3:14-18 Berean
The Day of the Lord is upon us, wherein we are have opportunity to be filled with all the fullness of Christ. We are to do His will in the earth as He has destined for us. We require all of His nature, all of it! We long for our hearts to be free of religious zeal, the need to appear and act righteous in front of others. If we are to have God’s redemptive justice married to His mercy, we will not feel a speck of superiority or in any way predict oncoming condemnation outside of His love.
Yes, we are to avoid the appearance of evil, but not because we want to impress others. We desire first and foremost, to be right in God’s eyes and at peace—whether others are okay with us or not! God says that when a man’s ways please the Lord, even His enemies will be at peace with him. Amazing, isn’t it? We submit to the Lord when we are drawn, preparing our hearts to receive answers from Him:
“The preparations of the heart belong to man, but the answer of the tongue is from the Lord. All the ways of a man are pure in his own eyes, but the Lord weighs the spirits. Commit your works to the Lord and your thoughts will be established. In mercy and truth atonement is provided for iniquity; and by the fear of the Lord one departs from evil.
When a man’s ways please the Lord, He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him.” Proverbs 16:1-3:6-7 NKJV
Think of it. God looks at the spirit dwelling within our hearts. We prepare our hearts for the Lord as we seek Him for His answers. When our ways please the Lord, our enemies won’t bother us. The finished refining of any area that now pleases God needs no more opposition, no internal or external enemies to test it. That part of our nature is covered by Him. God pronounces that the refining process is complete in us in that area.
This is where He is reigning over us, His authority supreme in all matters. Then we truly say we are ruling and reigning with Him! Remember, our enemies are not people:
“For we are not fighting against flesh-and-blood enemies, but against evil rulers and authorities of the unseen world, against mighty powers in this dark world, and against evil spirits in the heavenly places.” Ephesians 6:12 NLT
Do you realize that there are evil spirits in heavenly places? Heaven is a spiritual place of dwelling, and there are many dwelling places in God’s heavens. Not all heavens are pure in spirit, but there is the highest heaven, pure and clean, where those who overcome dwell with God. This is Zion, the new Jerusalem, the habitation of priests and kings, where the throne of God and the Lamb are established in full authority of rulership.
Oh yes, the enemy of our souls, the devil whom Jesus said was evil from the beginning, loves to stir up trouble in some of the heavenly places we dwell. He delights in dividing and conquering through strife among the brethren. He plants the seeds of discord, discontentment and disturbance in our hearts. But this is not always to be. For kingdom priests, these heavens are not our final destination.
“Behold, I will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in behold, he shall come, saith the Lord of hosts.” Malachi 3:1 Berean
“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth passed away, and there is no longer any sea. And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.
And I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying, ‘Behold, the tabernacle of God is among the people, and He will dwell among them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself will be among them and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be any death; there will no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed away.’
And He who sits on the throne said, ‘Behold, I am making all things new.’ And He said, ‘Write, for these words are faithful and true.’ Revelation 21:1-5 NASB
He sent His holy messenger, the Christ, to be in our temple, within us, preparing the way for the Lord to fully tabernacle in His people. Our holy habitation is a dwelling place not made by hands, just as Abraham sought. It is a place in the spirit while on this earth. He is providing a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness actually dwells here, in our very own fleshly earth. He brings about His Day in our earth, on this earth, where there won’t be death or tears or sorrow or crying or pain, ever again.
When God fully dwells within us, all tears are wiped away. Wouldn’t you like to be a part of wiping away all the many tears of sorrow and pain for the people of this world? These promises may not happen in our particular lifetime but they will happen. These promises cannot be for heaven, after death,as most conceive of it, because there already is no sorrow or tears or mourning or pain for the dead. It is to come on the earth, in this life, where death is to be destroyed.
Here, where we live in this world, is where the need is for the Lord to bring His full and complete victory over death and sin. And it shall be so, no matter how long it takes. Christians do not yet have unity in much of their beliefs and doctrines but most of us sense it is the beginning of the great and terrible day of the Lord. Knowing we are the temple of the Lord, we see that He has promised to come and dwell inside of a people who are His holy habitation.
“For we are the temple of the living God; just as God said, “‘ will dwell among them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.’ 2 Corinthians 6:16b NASB
‘I will show wonders in the heavens and on the earth, blood and fire and columns of smoke. The sun will be turned to darkness and the moon to blood before the coming of the great and awesome Day of the Lord.
And everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved; for on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there will be deliverance, as the Lord has promised, among the remnant called by the Lord.’ Joel 2:31-32 Berean
His kingdom priests, those dwelling in the spirit in Zion as well as those remaining on the earth, are being trained to build, to edify and be built up in love. We seek the Lord to tear down those strongholds that remain in heavenly places we have experienced. Satan can only operate where there remains earth for him to work within. Where God gives the victory, we no longer dwell on that earth.
“The Lord God said to the serpent, ‘Because you have done this, cursed are you above all livestock and above all beasts of the field; on your belly you shall go, and dust you shall eat all the days of your life.” Genesis 3:14 ESV
“Now judgment is upon this world; now the prince of this world will be cast out.” John 12:31 Berean
God’s judgment on the small serpent in the Garden was that he could only operate in the earth. The serpent is cunning, using his deceptive venomous mouth to deceive and destroy. And by the end of the book, in Revelation, he is going about as a roaring dragon, seeking whom he may devour. But the book also says he will be cast out, done for, destroyed, thrown into the lake of fire along with hell and death.
Snakes are an effective symbol of the devil’s weapons. Snakes have no hands or feet, but they do have a mouth with venom that can destroy. Is this not just what has happened in the Christian churches since the beginning? Words, words, words! Man’s opinions of the things of God, man’s judgment on others who believe differently, rumors and gossip condemning without understanding, laws and traditions debated and used to “kill” others’ ministries or reputations— all these words used to deceive and condemn are satan’s weapons.
But our earth is being swallowed up in victory! In every area where we overcome through the blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony, satan will have no more access to that part of our earthly man to trouble us. He can no longer plant his seed of deception and evil within our souls where we have a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness! He no longer is allowed to buffet us, to test us as we overcome in our walk with the Lord:
“For everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world—our faith. Who is it that overcomes the world except the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?” 1 John 5:4-5 ESV
“And they have conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, for they loved not their lives even unto death.” Revelation 12:11 ESV
We are living in the spirit in ever-growing, victorious areas no longer dominated by the fleshly habitations of men. All the saints who have passed on, eligible for the highest place in God through suffering and overcoming, dwell in spiritual Mount Zion. They have no more enemies, but we on this earth still have much to overcome. They without us cannot enter in, so you can imagine how they are cheering us on!
There is a great deal of the earthy in us that must be purged. Our enemy in this life is still around until God swallows up all in victory in the ages to come. There are those who will have a spirit of opposition and contention, coming against the word and will of God until facing Him after death, but the spirit within them cannot disturb our peace. Oh, Hallelujah! There is a season for all things.
God knows His sons and daughters and He is preparing us thoroughly for every good work, as Paul told Timothy:
“A large house contains not only vessels of gold and silver but also of wood and clay. Some indeed are for honorable use, but others are for common use. So if anyone cleanses himself of what is unfit, he will be a vessel for honor: sanctified, useful to the Master, and prepared for every good work.” 2 Timothy 2:20-21 Berean
God is the only one who knows exactly what is in the hearts of His people. He always knows where His wonderful surgical word needs to cut away the flesh, allowing the fire of His presence to burn up the dross of our earthly ways.
“For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.” Hebrews 4:12 NIV
Each of us can be a vessel of honor at some times, used for every good work, also having the potential at other times to be that vessel of dishonor used to try and test our fellow humans. We want all of God’s best as we interact in this world, desiring pure motives in our hearts. If called to be kingdom priests, we will represent intercession between God and men, a priesthood having spiritual authority as kings.
God will not give authority or responsibility in His kingdom into the hands of anyone who is not made in His likeness and image. And that is very good news, as we know what it is like to be under the authority of the ungodly. Oh, to be like our Father: full of love, always redemptive in our judgments with the intent to alleviate suffering and pain, releasing others from bondage, blessing and not cursing, waiting upon Him with endurance for His dealings.
Some of us talkers have many more times when God tells us to be quiet than to speak His word! Thankfully He has spiritual duct tape for our mouths necessary for just this purpose until His ways are fully written in our hearts. After enough times of God stopping words that rise up in haste or selfishness, to be heard rather than to hear, or just because it is not the time, our hearts will be purged so such words don’t even occur to us.
“Every way of a man is right in his own eyes: but the Lord pondereth the hearts.” Proverbs 21:2 KJV
“Every way of a man seems upright in his own eyes, yet it is Yahweh Who gauges the hearts.” Proverbs 21:2 Concordant Literal
God makes clear that we cannot judge our own hearts. We humans all think we’re right in our own eyes until God sheds His light within us sufficiently to see. The Hebrew word takan is translated as “ponder or gauge” in the above translation, meaning to “balance, measure out, or weigh” the heart. The Lord is not just seeing what is in our hearts, He is evaluating it, balancing it in accord with His righteous heart.
The Lord knows when our hearts are not right, whether we do not know or refuse to recognize it. He continually calls us to love with the unimaginable purity of the love of God. God is a Giver and He teaches us to be Givers as we receive from the mighty Giver of All. New vistas of God are unfolding within as He enlightens us to the truth of His redemptive judgment.
His Kingdom priests will be empowered to rule righteously, with mercy and justice together. Those dwelling in spiritual Zion on the other side are will be kingdom priests—kings with authority who fulfill the priestly function of interceding with God for people. The two together,kings and priests—are the Kingdom's authority in His holy spiritual government. Jesus is the only true, pure kingdom priest, but more are coming, as He is the firstborn of many brethren.
Melchizedek was the first such priest and Jesus is a priest of this Melchizedek order or realm of an endless life.
“Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine. He was the priest of God Most High, and he blessed Abram, saying, ‘Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth. And praise be to God Most High, who delivered your enemies into your hand.’” Genesis 14:18-20 NIV
“And having been made perfect, He became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey Him and was designated by God as high priest in the order of Melchizedek.” Hebrews 9:9-10 Berean
Melchizedek was king of Salem, meaning peace, serving as priest for God Most High. He suddenly appears in the account of Abraham’s experiences. In Revelation, God speaks of the many more kingdom priests He will form through overcoming as Jesus did, after this same Melchizedek order of an endless life. Others may not be called to be kingdom priests, not required to take the same route to God. God is in charge of each Christian’s calling.
After Jesus told Peter to feed my sheep, Peter asked Jesus what was to happen to John, his brother in Christ.
"Peter turned and saw that the disciple whom Jesus loved was following them. (This was the one who had leaned back against Jesus at the supper and had said, ‘Lord, who is going to betray you?’ When Peter saw him, he asked, ‘Lord, what about him?’
Jesus answered, ‘If I want him to remain alive until I return, what is that to you? You must follow me." John 21:20 NASB
Jesus essentially told Peter, “It’s none of your business what I do with another. You focus on following Me!” What great advice this remains, particularly when we are wondering why our sisters and brothers in Christ seem to be having experiences with God that differ from ours. We need not be concerned if another seems to be prospering in their way while we are not. We are told to not even concern ourselves with what another follower of Christ is, has, or may be doing that differs from our own lot in life.
What does it matter to us if they have 1000 followers while we have only a handful—or none? What is the difference if some are called to large successful ministries fit for that age while we wait upon God in the desert to become priests and kings for Him? We have the roadmap of His Word, by the spirit and in the Book. We must walk our own walk in the way God has designed for us. We cannot tell by outward appearance whether another is called and chosen by God as a king and priest in God’s spiritual kingdom.
Once when our son was in grade school, his circle of friends began to change, leaving him alone on the playground for a time. I told Chris it was a test from God. His all-too-human response was: “Well, can’t someone else take the test?” The only One who ever could, Jesus Christ, was my son’s Friend, and he did pass this test in his young life. There are times when another’s trials do look easier, even preferable, to ours. We might want to trade tests with them as Chris did.
But we have no idea, unless God reveals it, what that other person has or is now really experiencing. Our trials may appear similar, but God designs just the adversity we need to form us into His image. As we mature, we’re grateful that we only have our own particular tests that God has allowed. We are thankful not to have the experiences some other Christians are going through. It is true that when we are given much, much is required of us that is not seen by others.
There are always those who are suffering more, and others suffering less, than we are.
“For every man shall bear his own burden. Let him that is taught in the word communicate unto him that teacheth in all good things. Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” Galatians 6:506 KJV
It’s not so much about suffering or worthiness but about God’s will. As Jesus said, our job is to follow Him, passing those tests He puts in our way. Sometimes our tests and trials seem more difficult, even unfairly so. There are times when a series of adverse events have occurred, that we may say to God, “Really?? Really, Lord, you thought I needed all of this?” We give no credit to the devil as we are in the hands of the Father and it is Him with whom we have to deal.
It is the way of the flesh to bring critical judgment to what is happening to others. If bad things happen, the carnal judgment is that the person must have done something to deserve it. That’s what Job’s friends told him. This also means that those for whom good things happen must have done something to earn it. It is a comfortable, if erroneous, explanation for suffering, giving us the illusion that if we are good enough, we can escape suffering.
God’s judgments are different. They focus on our character and our calling, what will most grow the fruit of the kingdom within us. He is always working to refine His truth within, writing it in our hearts. Sometimes the suffering and trials that come upon us are because of what we have asked Him to work out within us, such as the old joke about praying for patience, only to have a number of things that require just that!
We all bring our past into our present walk until God deals, heals, and moves us on, enabling us to forget it. He is exposing and purging the lies we have accumulated along the way. Just as our calling and gifts differ, so do our wounds in this life. While all humans experience pain, even very similar events bring different testings for different people. Some saints have been deeply wounded by being lied to, stumbling around believing a deception that parents, caregivers, society , or the church taught them.
When these precious saints recognize the lies, particularly from those who are supposed to love them, a commitment to truth can begin to grow. Others suffer more from life’s losses, the many closed doors that God allows along the way. Some suffer so quietly, we don’t even know they have trials! The Lord works within to strengthen our faith, to refine our ability to trust God and His people who are sent our way to love us from a pure heart.
We deeply need the love side to grow to be kingdom priests who speak the truth in love:
“Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into Christ Himself, who is the head. From Him the whole body, fitted and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love through the work of each individual part.” Ephesians 4:15-16 Berean
The Body of Christ, the true church of the spirit, is built up in love. Observing some believers, however, we would sadly conclude that His kingdom is built of criticism, condemnation, laws and rules for other Christians who believe differently, let alone sinners who are missing the mark. How can this be? How many of God’s people have misunderstood or ignored this directive in favor of speaking the truth without God’s love?
Some saints have been so battered with scriptural truth they become discouraged in their walk. The goodness of God is overshadowed by this focus on what is wrong, regardless of whether the intent is to help rather than hurt. Some are created by God to be tender of heart, easily persuaded and sensitive to others. Harshness and anger from parents, caregivers, and society further this timidity into a fear of people more than God.
Such timidity God needs to swallow up, replacing fear with His boldness. The timid and fearful cannot enter, so we must learn to not fear anger, rejection, or punishment from others. God’s work of refinement for Christians enables us to be balanced as we stand on the truth, without fear or favor. No matter what man can do, He will enable such timid pleasers to become pleasers of their Lord and King:
“The Lord is for me; I will not fear; What can man do to me?” Psalms 118:6 NASB
God also knows how to temper His bold speakers of truth into ministers who serve others in love. Some people have not developed or nurtured the Lord’s compassion, His kind and patient ways of interacting with others. Bold against sin, they cut off the spiritual ears of their listeners as surely as Peter cut off the Roman soldier’s ear when they came to arrest Jesus. These fierce warriors God gentles into fiery loving warriors for Him!
He knows our frame, exactly what each of us needs to bring about the change we so long to have seen within. This is a calling to maturity in Him a reward for completing the way to God’s fullness. The prize of our High Calling of which Paul spoke is not a gift. Prizes are earned, rewarded for running the race well and successfully. Being kingdom priests is not a free gift, such as salvation. It requires sacrifice, overcoming suffering as obedient servants.
We do yearn for the Lord Jesus Christ to take up full residence within us, tabernacling—coming to fully dwell—in His temple which we are. Jesus said the kingdom is within us. It is established there with the purpose of us becoming His habitation. We are truly being built up in love to be His dwelling place.
“In Him [and in fellowship with one another] you also are being built together into a dwelling place of God in the Spirit.” Ephesians 2:22 Berean
As we actively engage with others in our calling, the holy spirit teaches us to look past outward behaviors to see the heart. When God graciously reveals the heart of another, He provides a key to understanding them. He will not tell us another’s secrets unless He knows we can be trusted with them. When we see the wounds, the arrows that have pierced the heart of those with whom we deal, we are enabled to compassionately understand even wrong behavior.
God reveals to us how harm has happened, the root of others’ actions and issues. This we take to God for the Holy Spirit's direction and guidance. God reveals the secrets of others’ hearts when our purpose of knowing is redemptive. God is never a tattle tale and He is the best keeper of our secrets, ever! Thankfully, there are many things that only God will know about us.
God is fully trustworthy. And when He calls us into His army, we are trusted with the deeper secrets of men’s souls, for the purpose of the ministryof intercession and healing. When we are the one sitting opposite a troubled soul, praying to our Lord to give us His insight into this person’s heart, will He not hear us and equip us to do the work He has called us to do? God allows us to understand how another is trapped in their misery, what led to their suffering and problems.
Then our spiritual intervention is meaningful, compassionate, and on target. God’s word always accomplishes what it is sent to accomplish. There is no failure in His work.
“ When I saw Him, I fell at His feet like a dead man. But He placed His right hand on me and said, ‘Do not be afraid. I am the First and the Last, the Living One. I was dead, and behold, now I am alive forever and ever! And I hold the keys of Death and of Hades.” Revelation 1:17 Berean
Jesus holds the keys to freedom from all death and misery, even for those who do not yet know Him. What does having a key mean? A key unlocks what has been hidden, so it can be seen, accessed, and dealt with. Keys give us a way in and Jesus Christ has the keys—the answers—to all that has brought death and hell to humans. Everything that separates us from God is accessed by Him within us, destroyed by the fire of His authority and presence.
This sounds like a really massive project, doesn’t it? While it is lifelong, it’s not too big for our God. Jesus Christ is unlocking within us anything that has been locked up, hidden within our hearts. The fire of His presence, His passionate wrath, deals with all that is death instead of life, hellish conditions instead of love, peace and joy. He already defeated it all and now He is within to defeat it in us, His temple.
Jesus grants us the keys to the death and hell that others are suffering, that we may minister a powerful word of love, hope and healing. God teaches His kingdom priests how to apply His keys, the answers that fit what’s been locked up in the darkness of our souls. His spirit of Life enlightens it all. There are good things locked up too, promises God has made to us that are yet to be released in our earth, to bring us to maturity in Him.
He holds the keys to death and hell, not man nor man’s will nor sataan that brings so much evil and destruction here on this earth. God gives discernment to those He calls for this work. We cannot judge by outward appearance or demeanor what is in the heart of another, whether their history, their struggles or their beliefs. And believers do struggle in the same way as non-believers in all things that are common to man.
We, however, have hope that our life’s struggles have their purpose in Him. We know that there is a way out. He always makes a way to escape.
“Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in and dine with him, and he with Me. To the one who overcomes, I will grant the right to sit with Me on My throne, just as I overcame and sat down with My Father on His throne.
He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” Revelation 3:20-21 Berean
The key to ruling and reigning with Jesus is to overcome all by the blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony. It is by faith that we enter in to all He has promised. As we overcome every trial and test that comes our way, we are qualifying to sit with Him, to rule as an authority in His kingdom of righteousness. When called to minister to the saints, we trust that those who come our way are those He is bringing.
Perhaps it is someone else’s prayers that brought them. They may or may not know our Lord, but regardless, they are God’s workmanship. We can have compassion for those God sends our way to walk with for a while, regardless of their beliefs. We can rest in knowing that He knows the end from the beginning for them. We are confident that Jesus Christ our Lord has the keys to unlock and expose in love and truth that which is keeping Him out of the hearts of people.
We search for these keys as we intercede as priests between God and the people He brings our way as well as those placed upon our hearts for intercession. Sometimes, God provides the key to understanding the other’s heart right away, but understanding another’s heart's motives does not always change the outcome. They must be ready, willing to follow through.
Some may need time following the word planted as a seed for change. Another may water this crop and witness the fruit of His spirit of truth and righteousness later. It is also difficult for those of us desiring to help others to accept that some people don’t want to be helped! It may not be their time, just as there were those in Jesus’ earthly ministry who were not given ears to hear nor eyes to see. Those who are not ready wear out others who keep trying to assist them on their journey.
We can end up working harder than they are on their issues! This happens in fellowships as well as families. It’s important to recall that Jesus was surrounded by acute and chronic need in the people in His earthly ministry, but He did not minister to everyone. When we are enabled to see into their hearts with discernment, seeing and hearing with our spiritual eyes and ears as God does, we are granted compassion and love for the other person, particularly if we have not walked the path that they have.
While many behaviors are sinful, problematic or wrong, they can be compassionately understood. And we often conclude we would be doing worse, or certainly no better, had we come the way they have come. One of my favorite verses at these times is:
“For He knows we are but dust and that our days are few and brief, like grass, like flowers, blown by the wind and gone forever.” Psalm 10314-16 TLB
Ah, yes. We are but dust, earthy. We came from the dust of the earth and will go back to it, as God so ordains until in the ages to come, all death is swallowed up in victory. Jesus Christ only did what the Father showed Him to do. He is absolutely able to show us what the Father would have us do in every situation or circumstance. Each step towards this kingdom priesthood requires no reliance on our flesh. It absolutely cannot enter in.
Only complete surrender to the will of God takes us through. He subjected us to this knowingly:
”For the premonition of the creation is awaiting the unveiling of the sons of God. For to vanity was the creation subjected, not voluntarily, but because of Him Who subjects it, in expectation.” Romans 8:18-20 Concordant Literal
We did not choose this way. God Himself subjected us to the vanity of this life. We did not volunteer for living in our present fleshly creation. We were created by God to be “transient, temporary, profitless,” as the plan of the ages unfolds to restore us back to the Garden, where Adam and Even were unable to complete God’s plan. God knows every person, inside and out and understands the creation in which we dwell now as our temporary home.
When we are called to be kingdom priests, sons of God and servants of man, we are being prepared by the Lord to deal with the hearts of others. Our high calling is to bring deliverance from Mount Zion, God’s holy habitation in the spirit. All we have is His, and all we go through is His path for preparing His Kingdom Priests. All we are or can be is preparation for the work of reaping the hearts of His people in this Day of the Lord.
Hear what He has promised:
“Therefore you do not lack any spiritual gift as you eagerly await the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ. He will sustain you to the end, so that you will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. God, who has called you into fellowship with His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, is faithful.” 1 Corinthians 1:7-9 Berean
Facing Our Gethsemanes
Here we're reflecting on the spiritual significance of Jesus' Gethsemane experience, emphasizing the importance of surrendering personal will to God's plan. The blog draws parallels between Jesus' struggle and human experiences, advocating for trust and obedience in God during life's most challenging moments.
Have you ever found yourself alone with God when facing the most important trial of your life? This is our Gethsemane experience, when we profoundly struggle to say, “Nevertheless, not my will, but Thine, be done.” Jesus Christ was in Gethsemane when He battled within, knowing the time of his death was at hand. He was in agony of spirit, in His humanity wanting another way than the incredible suffering and death laid out before Him.
His specific prayer is recorded in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke:
“Going a little farther, He fell face down and prayed, ‘My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me. Yet not as I will, but as You will.’” Matthew 26:39 Berean
“And he said, ‘Abba, Father, all things are possible unto thee; take away this cup from me: nevertheless not what I will, but what thou wilt.’” Mark 14:36 Berean
“Father, if You are willing, take this cup from Me. Yet not My will, but Yours be done.” Luke 22:42 Berean
When everything within Him did not want to face what He knew the Father had foretold was ahead for Him, He poured out His heart to His Father. He desired the place He had with the Father before He was born as a man and required assurance that this would be the result of His death. Jesus set all that He desired aside with either the word yet” or “nevertheless.” Jesus was saying to the Father, “Disregard all I just said, if it must be this way.”
Jesus knew His Father could deliver Him in an instant. Did He not say that He could call and a myriad of angels would rescue Him? But His great heart of obedience, His understanding of the Father’s plan, and His love for us, led Him to commit all to God’s will. It is most comforting to know that when we are in agony about facing something that God has brought us to in our walk with Him, a critical crossroad in our life, we, too, can pour out all of our feelings to our Father.
God knows what is in our hearts and we can be assured, as Jesus was, that He hears us. Jesus did not leave that time of prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane the same as He went into it. When we submit our will to the Father’s will, we leave our times of desperate prayer changed as well, with His strength girding up our submission to His will.
Jesus, the Pattern son, went to Gethsemane right before He was to be arrested and condemned to die on the cross. He asked His disciples several times to wait and pray with Him, but they were tired and fell asleep. And Father God did not immediately lift the agony from His soul. Three times He went to pray, talking with His Father about it.
His feelings, His soul realm of human mind, will, and emotions, did not rule Him. Thus, He was strengthened to endure the path before Him. He never said He would not obey. He just asked the Father if there was another way to accomplish what God intended, if this “cup” of sorrow and horrendous pain He was to drink could in any way bypass Him. How humanly alone our Lord must have felt!
Luke gives the most complete account of this most difficult time in Gethsemane:
“Now when He arrived at the place, [Gethsemane], He said to them, ‘Pray that you do not come into temptation.’ And He withdrew from them about a stone’s throw, and He knelt down and began to pray, saying, ‘Father, if You are willing, remove this cup from Me; yet not My will, but Yours be done.’
Now an angel from heaven appeared to Him, strengthening Him. And being in agony, He was praying very fervently; and His sweat became like drops of blood, falling down upon the ground. When He rose from prayer, He came to the disciples and found them sleeping from sorrow, and He said to them, ‘Why are you sleeping? Get up and pray that you do not come into temptation.’ Luke 22:40-46 NASB
He had just told the disciples two days before that the time when He would be crucified was close at hand. He said this right before the Last Supper, during Passover, when He identified Judas as the traitor. Revealing Judas as Jesus’ betrayer was another blow to this close group of His faithful followers. They had gone through tremendous experiences together, learning and then ministering the words and the gifts of Jesus as He commissioned them to do. They saw the crowds swell and then diminish, the favor and esteem reduced to hatred and enmity for their Master.
Jesus well knew the upcoming period of time would test them to their limits and wanted them to pray for strength as well. He also knew they would be much more vulnerable after His arrest than any of them anticipated. He urged them to pray that they would not come into temptation, but they did not believe they would betray their Lord. But the disciples had been “sorrowing” and Jesus understood that.
We may assume the same thing—until such a Gethsemane experience comes upon us. For most of us, it is not a life and death matter, not comparable to what Jesus went through, though there are Christians, the past great martyrs as well as those currently in great persecution for their faith, who have and still suffer and die for their Lord.
As these crucial events unfolded before the disciples, however, it was not just Peter who denied Jesus three times to others. All of the disciples fled during His arrest, out of fear of the Roman soldiers and the angry crowd stirred up by the Jewish leaders of the time. The scripture records:
“At that time [of Jesus’ arrest] Jesus said to the crowds, ‘Have you come out with swords and clubs to arrest Me as you would against a man inciting a revolt? Every day I used to sit on the temple grounds teaching, and you did not arrest Me. But all this has taken place so that the Scriptures of the prophets will be fulfilled.’
Then all the disciples left Him and fled.’” Matthew 26: 55-56 NASB
He was truly alone at the darkest hour of His life. He knew the joy that was set before Him but he still had to go through being betrayed, arrested, whipped, ridiculed and beaten before dying a shameful and pain-filled death on the cross. He knew what He would be facing and also knew all would abandon Him. He had been given strength to endure at Gethsemane.
Matthew’s account of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane varies from some aspects of Luke’s account:
“Then Jesus came with them to a place called Gethsemane, and told His disciples, ‘Sit here while I go over there and pray.’ And He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee with Him, and began to be grieved and distressed. Then He said to them, ‘My soul is deeply grieved, to the point of death; remain here and keep watch with Me.’
And He went a little beyond them, and fell on His face and prayed, saying, ‘My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; yet not as I will, but as You will.’ And He came to the disciples and found them sleeping, and He said to Peter, ‘So, you men could not keep watch with Me for one hour? Keep watching and praying, so that you do not come into temptation; the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.’
He went away again a second time and prayed, saying, ‘My Father, if this cup cannot pass away unless I drink from it, Your will be done.’ Again He came and found them sleeping, for their eyes were heavy. And He left them again and went away and prayed a third time, saying the same thing once more.
Then He came to the disciples and said to them, ‘Are you still sleeping and resting? Behold, the hour is at hand and the Son of Man is being betrayed into the hands of sinners. Get up, let’s go; behold, the one who is betraying Me is near!’” Matthew 26:36-46 NASB
Both accounts report that Jesus told them to pray, then left His disciples to pray the more earnestly to His Father. They fell asleep instead. They did not have the strength to stay alert and pray to stay out of temptation. Jesus doesn’t bother them the third time, but it’s hard to tell whether He was chastising or warning them with these two accounts. He does show compassion in recognizing their exhaustion from sorrow, wanting to be with their Lord in spirit, but their flesh is too weak.
Since then it is a frequent, even casual quote for people to say, “Well, the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” Our flesh is weak and cannot accomplish the will of God. Jesus coming in the human flesh of a man illustrates this, particularly in His Gethsemane experience. At no other time does our Lord talk to the Father about desiring to avoid what God wanted Him to do.
Christians called and chosen of the Lord see the pattern Jesus set forth. When we are to endure something that God clearly requires of us but we dread, hate, or even have agony about, only the spirit of Christ within us can strengthen us to obedience. As we persist in prayer like our Lord and Master did, we come to know:
“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Philippians 4:13 NKJV
We may not yet see all of our flesh being swallowed up by the spirit of Christ within us, but we have faith that what He promises, He will accomplish within us when we submit our will to His. This does not necessitate a change of our emotions. Obedience submits the will, and the emotions follow as God takes over. Sometimes He brings immediate peace with our surrender.
At other times, we may continue to have feelings about the matter, but our surrendered will steadfastly holds us in His will, the will of our eternally faithful Friend. We are enabled to have the faith of Abraham, though we may not see the outcome:
“Therefore, the promise comes by faith, so that it may rest on grace and may be guaranteed to all Abraham’s offspring—not only to those who are of the law but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham. He is the father of us all. As it is written: ‘I have made you a father of many nations.’
He is our father in the presence of God, in whom he believed, the God who gives life to the dead and calls into being what does not yet exist. Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed and so became the father of many nations, just as he had been told, ‘So shall your offspring be.’” Romans 4:16-18 Berean
Jesus was in agony about fulfilling the plan of God. Our Gethsemane experiences appear in yielding to God’s will about what we want or desire, resist or even dread. It’s the way we learn the harder lessons of trust that He knows best, even though we cannot see that. We need to stay in God’s school until we have the faith necessary to believe all that we know. We do believe every bit of what God has promised will come to pass, regardless of whether we now see it.
“I will lead those who are blind by a way they have not known, In paths they have not known I will guide them. I will turn darkness into light before them and uneven land into plains.
These are the things I will do, and I will not leave them undone.” Isaiah 42:16 NASB
We cannot know all the paths God has for us and that is a good thing! There are periods in any Christian’s life that, had we known what was coming as Jesus did, it would become that much harder to face. We enjoy it when the Lord gives us a glimpse of His specific good future for us, but it is not so enjoyable when He gives us a sense of impending suffering or a denial of a strong desire we have.
These are severe times of testing when the Gethsemane experience is continually in our lives, such as when those we love suffer and die. All of Jesus’ followers experienced this. Surrender to the Lord’s will brings much affliction to our flesh at such times. But truly yielding our will to His also brings acceptance to what is or will be rather than what we so very much want, desire, and even believe that we need.
Practicing surrender eventually results in more rapid yielding of our will to His will as we walk with Him. Surrender is sharply different from giving up in resignation. Giving up is not true, full surrender to God and His plan. It may be a stage we pass through, the best we can offer the Lord on our way to full surrender. It’s when we conclude that we cannot control the outcome, that it is beyond our ability to change it and God seems to be unwilling to do so.
We may ‘give up’ in defeat rather than faithfully surrender to what the Lord decrees. It may sound something like “Ok God have it Your way. I will just stay miserable and depressed but you are God and I’m not.” With the full yielding of our soul—our mind, will, and emotions—complete, however, we stop trying to avoid what is necessary in God’s plan for us. We face it, deal with it, truly accept it.
We no longer pursue ideas or methods to keep His will from happening or seek and search other paths to what we want. We recognize that we have already surrendered to Him as our Lord and Savior. We belong to him, so we give up trying to make it happen, with or without His blessing. Obedient saints do confront things that are dreaded, that we’d prefer to avoid!
Frequently this can be asking, hoping, or praying for physical life for others or ourselves. Sometimes it is a deeply felt and long-held desire to have something that other saints have seemingly obtained without struggle, such as a life partner or a child to love. Such dearly-held dreams that are human desires but not meant for us are crucified in a Gethsemane experience as we yield to His will.
Surrender is our sacrifice. The questions and feelings we bring before the Lord are similar to His Gethsemane prayer, though we cannot fathom the deep agony Jesus faced at that time. There are many natural human desires —to have a secure home and income, to be safe and well-loved, and to stop going through the same trials that never seem to resolve on our behalf. Sometimes we feel like the horse running a race to get to the reward of winning, only to see it denied again and again.
Discouragement sets in, even despair when we do not see God’s answers in our time frame or seemingly even in our lifetime here on this earth. But His peace arrives only through surrendering to what is and His will ordains, regardless of our desires. We can always rest in the scriptures of the promises He has given:
“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:11 NASB
Here is God’s promise that the eventual outcome of our spiritual lives is a hopeful, not despairing future, to bring us to a state of peace that seems impossible. Momentarily we struggle to believe this during any Gethsemane experience of agonizing over obedience to Him. Saints who come to these spiritual turning points believe that God is able to either fulfill their heart’s desire or deliver them from the torment of wanting something God has denied them. When we accept that God’s plan does not include what we are seeking Him for, like Jesus we are strengthened to accept His will is not ours.
Such Gethsemane experiences are deep spiritual lessons from God. Typically we are alone in them, just as Jesus was alone with His Father. While others may not all fall asleep like the disciples, they still cannot be inside us, experiencing with us the agony of our souls. God takes us through times of sorrow and grief that are common to man, not out of them. Our prayers are that we have patient endurance in accepting His decision. He is able to take the pain of loss, of denial, of the ending of hope, from us. Then we are in His rest, regardless of the outcome.
A Gethsemane experience is a crisis, a turning point in our walk of faith. Though it might seem turning points in our walk would come primarily from peak spiritual experiences, times of acute struggle more often bring further understanding, refinement, and commitment to God’s ways. They are necessary to learn more about our God. Many of the Lord’s people in the Bible waited for years for the fulfillment of God’s promises to them. What God promises will happen but the timing is still His—unless we take matters into our own hands.
Those things we struggle with in our Gethsemane times may require years of waiting on the Lord. We can be most miserable during this wait, especially when we have a very strong will to have what is being denied. Or we can learn to wait with peace and faith in our Father as Jesus did. When waiting without knowing what God plans specifically for our lives, when we are walking blind into our future, it can be most troubling indeed! But we will wait, either in distress or in the peace of God that passes understanding.
These are the times in our walk when we learn to rest and trust like never before. When we yield it all, seeking Him with a whole heart, He is able to grant His peace and trust in the waiting regardless of outcome. A very important lesson during these Gethsemane experiences is learning, really knowing, that God loves us. Jesus had heavy feelings, with much weighing on His heart. He took it all to the Father, who sent an angel to strengthen Him in facing what was to come.
Jesus did not pretend to be a happy martyr in Gethsemane. Neither should we. Jesus did not want to have to do it—who would? But there was no rebellion in His heart as there may be in ours. He was well-practiced in doing the will of His Father. Jesus always did the Father’s will. God is faithful and most able to answer surrendered prayer by granting it. Or He may show another path for us, a better way for our lives to unfold.
God knows the end from the beginning, the unexpected changes in our future circumstances that we cannot know in order to plan for ahead of time. It is easy to look back and be grateful for how He skillfully and perfectly planned things out, even if, at the time, we were angry, resentful, or even pouting about the matter. We learn to surrender, waiting peacefully for His answer for us.
Or, we can continue to fret and fuss, complain and even become depressed and bitter. God knows these things are in our hearts and will help us as we are learning full surrender to Him, no matter how long it takes. When we desperately want something that He is not granting, God is burning out the dross within us. He knows what we’ve been waiting for, asking for, knocking for.
The issue is this: the very thing we most want is at risk of being more important to us than the Lord is, an idol in our lives. He sees the longing and even desperation in our hearts—that we believe what we desire is most important, if not essential. But He will have no other gods before Him, as He states many times in the Bible.
“Let there be no strange god among you, nor shall you worship any foreign god.” Psalms 81:19 Amplified
Strange, foreign gods were always an issue with the Israelites. They were surrounded by those who worshiped idols and kept falling into this familiar but grievous sin. We are also surrounded by things that others idolize. What is an idol but an object of worship, something—or someone—we adore? We can certainly identify idols in our present society, most of which God does not prioritize.
What people love to have and love to do can grow into taking more and more of our focus, time, and investment. More than a few of us Christians have had desires in our hearts at some point that somehow became more important than the Lord within us. What we believe is essential to our life and happiness most definitely is not essential if it is not God’s will for us.
Regardless of the outcome, the path of life is to surrender our desires to the Lord. While in our Gethsemane experience, however, disturbing human thoughts flood our minds. This is most likely to occur when our struggle is with a common desire for a good thing that other Christians seem to have easily received: “God, don’t you love me enough to grant me what is so very important to me? How come you allow others to have [children, good health, healing, a life partner, a loving, stable family, a long life, success, esteem, wealth, beauty etc. etc.] but do not grant this to me?”
Such thoughts, while all too humanly understandable, risk anger with the Lord Himself. God knows when we are and loves us anyway, but we put this barrier between us so we cannot connect with our Father to receive what we truly need. God has a plan for our lives and does know how to listen to His people who are in anguish before Him. But this affliction is to our flesh, our earthly natures that cannot enter in to His kingdom.
Only God sees in our hearts to know what our primary motives are. Jesus understandably did not want to go through the suffering He knew was to come. We can comfort ourselves that, though we suffer with Him, most of us will never have the agony He brought to the Father at Gethsemane. Never was anything more important than Jesus’ submission to the cross. It was the hardest test of Jesus’ earthly life and we may never know what all was in His heart as he beseeched the Father in Gethsemane.
Gethsemane's experiences are the ultimate times of testing in our walk with God. Everyone’s Gethsemane experience is different because we each have our own most important desires of our hearts for which we petition God. When we pass these tests, not surprisingly, they often yield the richest of spiritual rewards. We may not be granted what we wanted, but we are empowered to better face sudden threats of painful loss and times of adversity.
We can be like Him in both surrender and the resurrection of a new beginning that He works within. As a result of Jesus’ obedience, His surrender at Gethsemane, the whole plan of God was revealed and changed for all:
“Join me in suffering, like a good soldier of Christ Jesus. This is a trustworthy saying: ‘If we died with Him, we will also live with Him; if we endure, we will also reign with Him’”. 2 Timothy 2:3;11-12 Berean
While our decisions are not equally impactful for others, God does rely on people to carry out His will on earth as it is in heaven. We don’t know what the cost of our desires will be in what we are called to do, but He does. My own Gethsemane experience was about a lifelong desire to have a child. I was by no means instantly obedient to laying this down for whatever God called me to do. Unfortunately, it took years of misery, even bitterness, until I yielded this to the Lord.
When I came to the point of true surrender, I gave up any right I thought I had to be a mother if it would not allow me to fulfill His will for my life. What I ultimately asked for and was granted was peace, regardless, not the sharp pain of being barren while others, even those who did not want children, became mothers. Through His word, God showed me He was in charge of Who has children—if, when, and how.
It was not man I was dealing with but God Almighty. I am reverent enough not to insist on my own way in such an important matter. I was not tempted to make it happen myself, as some suggested I do, but I did not want to suffer any more. After years of struggle and a significant change in circumstances, I was granted great peace through surrender! I finally knew I would be ok remaining childless, could live a fulfilled life and have a blessed future, if that was His will.
I was eventually forever changed in realizing that God was not denying me a child because He did not love me, and that I could be granted peace in Him regardless. But what a battle raged between my soul and His spirit for far too long! The lessons I learned through those years of struggle made a permanent change in my spiritual walk with the Lord. Our Gethsemane experiences may be different but God is faithful in providing the strength and peace to go through them all.
Jesus left that time of prayer in the garden of Gethsemane strengthened to do the Father’s will and so can we. Jesus submitted to what came upon Him without a word of protest or defense of self. Sometimes, as God did with Abraham in telling him to sacrifice Isaac, his only child, God lets us know we have passed the test and then releases us from it. Shortly after my surrender and peace, God made me know, confirmed by a prophet, that I would have a child.
Circumstances changed, and Rich and I had our wonderful son, Chris, when I was 40 and he was 41. At least I was not as old as Sarah when the Lord gave her and Abraham their son of the promise, Isaac! This may be nothing like your Gethsemane experience, but it was what God dealt with me about. I wish I would have been able to handle it more spiritually, more maturely, but it seemed to be the best I could do.
There are other Gethsemane times when God said no to me, such as the death of my brother at age 39, when the Lord eventually comforted my heart in the loss. He knows what is required for the future of His plan. He always knows the end from the beginning and brings us to that place where we can trust Him in all things. Remaining single when a Christian desires to have a life partner, experiencing people we love and are praying for die rather than live, seeking physical health and release from affliction that is slow to come or never does, periods of suffering and loss with changes, even betrayals in our work, home, and country—all are trials we go through on the path to spiritual growth.
“I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have [perfect] peace. In the world, you have tribulation and distress and suffering, but be courageous [be confident, be undaunted, be filled with joy];
I have overcome the world [My conquest is accomplished, My victory abiding.]” John 16:33 Amplified
That this world can never bring us but temporary peace is increasingly evident. The Gethsemane experience may be about any trial facing us in this life, with one common to all: it will be the very hardest thing for us to lay down, to surrender to God’s plan instead of our own. Perhaps you cannot relate to what tested me the most, but Jesus can. Jesus Christ our Lord has already been through it all, so He knows.
“For we do not have a High Priest who is unable to sympathize and understand our weaknesses and temptations, but One who has been tempted [knowing exactly how it feels to be human] in every respect as we are, yet without [committing any] sin.” Hebrews 4:15 Amplified
Jesus knows. He is at the right hand of the Father, ever interceding against the enemy of our souls. We can do everything required of us because He is our strength within. We are comforted in all ways by His spirit. We come out victorious, just as He did in the resurrected life given by the Father to Him for us.. We can trust that we are stronger, better, more obedient, more like Him, when we emerge from the cocoon of a Gethsemane experience to fly free of any weight that has held us back.
The key is not whether we get what we want or not but the peace that follows surrender to God, trusting His will, not our earthly perspective. Times of adversity that bring the most suffering to our human nature are part of His preparation for what He has called us to do in this life. While we prefer the times of blessing and peace, times of refreshing in the spirit, these do not create the deep changes in our hearts that times of affliction and struggle produce.
It was true for Jesus and when we want to be like Him, it must be true for us. We can wish it weren’t so, but Father God planned it this way:
“It was good for me to be afflicted, that I might learn Your statutes.” Psalms 119:71 Berean
God’s plan is always the best, no matter how difficult it may seem, how weak our flesh may be in the matter. Looking back, we are grateful in seeing how God’s plans unfolded for us for our good. Some dearly held dreams for our lives are desires that God has placed in our hearts and are eventually granted. Others need to be rooted up, burned up by God’s fiery presence within, so these fleshly desires do not hinder our walk with God and the calling He has destined for us.
We must be free to fulfill what we have been called and chosen to do. There are things that we must do, just like Jesus did, and God gives peace and strength to go through it. No one wants a Gethsemane experience, but most Christians who go on to know the Lord and His ways will have one or more. It’s time to consider anything we hold on to in our hearts, even those good things that we long for, as matters that God would have us yield to Him.
He will have a people called by His name who do not put anything above Him. When we surrender all, He makes it so. Does He not remind us that He has overcome the world so that we can be of good cheer while in it? So, we sing:
“Nothing can happen outside of His will. Trust in His love, be patient. Hold still.
The clouds will all vanish, the sun again shine, if you will make the Father’s will thine.” Author unknown
Enough Love to Go Around
In this blog, we talk about the depth of human nature, contrasting our capacity for sin with our potential for love, compassion, and beauty, inspired by Christian teachings. It delves into the concept of seeing the world as God does, with perfect balance between love and justice, and reflects on the transformative power of divine love and the redemptive nature of God's justice, as revealed through biblical scriptures.
The Amplified Bible beautifully states the heart of God in loving the world:
“For God so [greatly] loved and dearly prized the world, that He [even] gave His [One and] only begotten Son, so that whoever believes and trusts in Him [as Savior] shall not perish, but have eternal life.” John 3:16 Amplified
God, our Father, has an infinite amount of love for His creation, especially humans, but this fleshly world often behaves as if there is not enough love to go around. We humans, including Christians, have so many ways we do it. This poverty mentality of love and grace appears when our strong sense of justice demands that others pay fully for their mistakes. It shows up when others seemingly get unearned favor. It’s about the “haves” and “have-nots.
It’s present when we worry that someone else is getting a “free ride” for what we worked so hard to get. It’s about the “deserving” versus the “undeserving,” who is judged “worthy” of benefits or blessings. It’s the judgment of this group against that by belief, race, culture, appearance, or other fleshly characteristics that people use to label, categorize and often dismiss others. There is an endless list of words that could be added to this list because we humans have practiced this behavior a long time!
We are doing this every time we divide people instead of unifying them in Love. It incorporates the multitude of ways we lose sight that we are all the creation of God. We are all greatly loved and dearly prized. Not just Christians, not just our brand of believers, not just people of our race or culture or background, not just the successful, not just…not just…!
When we view love as finite, having to be earned, or unequally distributed, it limits our growth in the Lord, let alone our intimate relationships. How could it not, when God is love? Our eternal Father is many other things as well, full of mercy and justice, longsuffering and goodness. But love, His incomparable agape Love, is who Father God is! He has the complete, full attributes of the apostle Paul’s definition.
“Love is patient, is kind. Love is not jealous. Love is not bragging, is not puffed up, is not indecent, is not self-seeking, is not incensed, is not taking account of evil, is not rejoicing in injustice, yet is rejoicing together with the truth, is forgoing all, is believing all, is expecting all, is enduring all.
Love is never lapsing: yet, whether prophecies, they will be discarded, or languages, they will cease, or knowledge, it will be discarded…Yet now are remaining faith, expectation, love - these three. Yet the greatest of these is love."" 1 Corinthians 13:4-8;13 Concordant Literal
If His love has no limit and His grace has no measure, why are we limiting and measuring it out to one another? His love, any genuine love, unites. It does not divide because God hates division. There would appear to not be enough love to go around when our love only stretches to “us four and no more.” We continue to see differentness as badness, either making us better than or worse than the other, evoking emotions such as envy, jealousy, and spite.
We simply cannot seem to shake free of this division, this mentality of scarcity of love. We all do it whether aware of it or not. Only God is able to grant us His love for all, even those who are deemed unlovable. God continually provides lessons in love, stretching our hearts to love more fully. Just when we think we’re pretty good at this, He will send someone who challenges us to grow further, accessing more of God’s love for those who are least lovable.
Who should be the recognized experts in loving, including all those unlovable folks, than God’s people? Who will love the unlovable if we do not do it through God’s provision of unlimited love?
“By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” John 13:35 NIV
This is the only way, the final way, that all will know—from the least to the greatest, from the lowest to the highest, from the little one to the elderly, the living and the dead—all will know God’s love for His creation, most especially all humans:
“For it is written, ‘As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.’” Romans 14:11 KJV
God will do it, no matter the ages it will take. If He was a forceful God, He could have made all bow the knee, demanding a verbal confession that He is God. He has the power to do it but fortunately has an abundance of mercy and patience to wait until love is sincere and without guile. We are to become a people showing forth our love for Him and others from our very beings. He so loved the world before any were saved by His Son!
God specializes in looking at hearts, so He is able to weed out thoughts, attitudes, and misbeliefs that prevent us from expanding His love within us and creating unity with others. Where there is division, there is strife and hatred, weakening anything we are trying to accomplish. Whether it is a family, a fellowship, a community, or a nation, division limits achievement and quality of life as well as harming individuals.
We will not be unified by doctrine, by one natural system, by laws or regulations, or any other means. Only the love of God, the highest standard there is, can accomplish unity. God knows the garden of our hearts, where He continually plants seeds to bear the fruit of the spirit. He contends with our weeds while nurturing and growing the fruit of His nature of righteousness, peace and joy in the kingdom of God inside each of us.
As His love expands in us, we are more able to let it flow to others. The Christ within makes room for more of His love in our being, expanding our borders by His own will and character. He causes that endless supply of Living Water to easily flow out to others— all those others we formerly avoided, separated ourselves from, judged, criticized, or rejected, would not be seen with, or otherwise isolated— limiting their access to the love of God through us.
Father God is the master at tearing down walls of division. We see all the walls in the body of Christ, and know this is far, far beyond any of us to fix. But the Lord is changing us, making us like our older brother Jesus Christ the Lord, the firstfruits of this age of Sonship. And He is changing us to truly realize just how much our Lord absolutely hates and despises division among us:
“There are six things that the Lord hates, seven that are an abomination to Him: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked plans, feet that run rapidly to evil, a false witness who declares lies, and one who spreads strife among brothers.” Proverbs 6:16 NASB
Know the truth of this: God is against division! Each one of these six things causes disunity and conflict among people. When we sow discord, most especially with our Christian brothers and sisters, we limit and block their connection with God, or at least distort His nature as it is filtered through our own. Aren’t these spots in our garments that must go, places where our nakedness needs to be covered.
This then is keeping the love of God from flowing their way. We stop the flow of the great river of Life that all humans require to thrive. We’re behaving as some parents and families do—as if there is only so much love to go around. Love is believed to be limited, it is shared sparingly, given to the good, the favorite, the one who makes the biggest fuss, ones we are close to, understand, agree with or to whom we can relate. We withhold love or connection with all those “others” in the family God and this world God so loves.
We so easily show a scarcity of love for anyone who displeases us by not performing up to our standards. It’s much more comfortable to ignore this condition within our own hearts because it is so commonly human. Our natural mind reasons it is no big deal because we all do it. Division and strife have been around forever, beginning with Cain and Abel, and on through the centuries of God’s people.
Christian churches started out well but within a few years, even the early church fellowships were in conflict as local leaders fought for position and authority. These ambitious believers took followers unto themselves, dividing them and eventually even excluding the apostle Paul, who had birthed so many of them. The New Testament writers said so:
“I know that after my departure, savage wolves will come in among you and will not spare the flock. Even from your own number, men will rise up and distort the truth to draw away disciples after them.” Acts 30:29-30 Berean
“But I will keep on doing what I am doing, in order to undercut those who want an opportunity to be regarded as our equals in the things of which they boast. For such men are false apostles, deceitful workers, masquerading as apostles of Christ.” 2 Corinthians 11:12-13 Berean
“Children, it is the last hour; and just as you have heard that the antichrist is coming, so now many antichrists have appeared. This is how we know it is the last hour. They went out from us, but they did not belong to us.
For if they had belonged to us, they would have remained with us. But their departure made it clear that none of them belonged to us.” 1 John 2:20-23 Berean
Paul ministered the simple faith of Jesus Christ as sufficient for all, but among the flock, even then, there were people who were anti-christ or “against Christ.” Those who coveted followers for themselves needed to distort the truth that Paul had taught by adding more than the sufficiency of faith in Jesus Christ to accomplish it. It’s difficult to get your own following if you do not alter the message in a way that shows you have more “truth” than another.
This is a common way to establish one’s unique knowledge and leadership. Paul called them savage wolves, biting and devouring the flock because of their own greedy appetite for power and recognition among other believers. John also writes about them, calling those who had separated themselves from the original fellowship antichrists. He saw they were working against Christ, for self instead of for the Lord.
The Corinthian believers had this condition of division from false apostles who were deceiving the believers for their own gain. Paul told the Corinthians this kept them immature, babes in Christ:
“And I, brothers and sisters, could not speak to you as spiritual people, but only as fleshly, as to infants in Christ. I gave you milk to drink, not solid food; for you were not yet able to consume it. But even now you are not yet able, for you are still fleshly.
For since there is jealousy and strife among you, are you not fleshly, and are you not walking like ordinary people? For when one person says, ‘I am with Paul,’ and another, ‘I am with Apollos,’ are you not ordinary people?” 1 Corinthians 3:1-4 NASB
These are things God hates, but there are no people on this list. What is on the list are conditions of the heart requiring change. It is not the outwardly sinful behaviors that God is after first but the heart conditions that lead to it. We should hate what God hates and the hard truth is these things He hates are found in the hearts of many of us Christians.
Paul said that division, strife, and jealousy among these early Christians were fleshly, not spiritual, revealing their immaturity in Christ. But Paul makes no mention of outer differences in traditions and practices as signs of immaturity, The Apostle well knew the roots of such behaviors. And this same abominable weed continues growing in our garden of love.
In fact, it is so common, and Christ’s body of believers are so divided, that we don’t seem to think much about this strife and division that God hates. We have accepted names for our division of the body of Christ. We are taught a list of doctrines that divide and distinguish us from others. We may fellowship across denominational and non-denominational lines, but that is not unity in love. Such separation has been around so long, it is normal and appears insurmountable.
We also seem to prioritize condemning and trying to control the visible sins of the flesh over what is in our hearts. But our Lord is crystal clear all through the Bible that it is what is in our hearts that causes the sin, including lack of love and unity among us. God sees the roots of jealousy, envy, coveting another’s calling, influence, pride, desire for status, possession or position, all part of our fleshly natures.
Worse, the sins of the flesh seem often to be the primary judgment believers put on unbelievers, while our own hearts remain full of guile. Our Lord had some strong words for this:
“Do not judge, so that you will not be judged. For in the way you judge, you will be judged; and by your standard of measure, it will be measured to you. Why do you look at the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye?
Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ and look, the log is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye!’” Matthew 7:1-5 NASB
Deep down, we are fearful we will not get our portion because someone else has theirs. We desire to be the main person others look to, whether it is in ministry, friendship, coworkers, families, or nations. It’s understandable to want to be noticed and valued, get attention and commendation. So very normal, but not pleasing to God. Humans are just naturally aware of others’ faults more than our own. This is the flesh nature we were given and God has provided the only answer: Jesus Christ makes us a new creation in Him!
Just when we think God has pulled all of these divisive weeds up, we find prejudicial thoughts sprouting up, separating and limiting our love for others. This remains a grievous condition for us today, as it was to Paul and John in the early church. God our Creator is not surprised. It has been deeply ingrained in our fleshly ways. Do you think God was surprised when this showed up right away in the Garden? Was He caught unprepared for the choices Eve, then Adam, made?
God does not point out such things in our hearts without making a way of escape. He is able to change our hearts, to continually replace our limited, divisive human love with His all-encompassing Father love for everyone. So, when love is granted conditionally in some families, when others are required to “earn” love, be “good enough” to be loved, it causes great harm and grievous offenses.
Love and favor unfairly divided between parents and their various children or with extended family can be passed down generation to generation. Such favoritism or unmerited favor may be just in the child’s view, but there are families who have a clear favorite, spoken or unspoken, which every member knows. This even explains historical family splits that took place so long ago we have forgotten why.
Division is harmfully sustained in families long after the favoritism or jealousy that began the strife is remembered. This continues until someone breaks this generational curse by bringing it to the cross. It may be this way, but it does not have to stay this way. May God send healing to each heart that did not feel fully loved as we learn about God’s love and how it differs from what we may have learned growing up.
The world has perpetrated many poor models for love, modeled all over in our society an d, sadly, in the Christian community. Thankfully, Father God does not love us only when we are being good, nor does He withdraw love when we are being bad. We may have learned this as a child but may God deliver us from such childish ways. This style of conditional love eventually damages a child’s view of Father God.
How are they to believe in an all-loving Parent they cannot see when they’ve not seen it in action here on earth? Children are harmed in their souls and spirits when growing up in households where it would seem there is not enough love for all. It surely becomes harder to extend this to our neighbors and communities when this is both seen in parenting children and modeled for the children in how partners treat each other.
Such behavior instills a fear of losing God’s love such as they have seen happening in their homes. Instead of running to Him in trust, knowing that His love is steadfast and sure, never limited, they fear and avoid Him. That is not God! He shows no favoritism or partiality among people. And God’s love has no limits:
“For the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great, mighty, and awesome God, showing no partiality and accepting no bribe.” Deuteronomy 10:17 Berean
“…for there is no respect of persons with God.” Romans 2:11 KJV
“…[God] who is not partial to princes and does not favor rich over poor? For they are all the work of His hands.” Colossians 3:25 Berean
“And you, masters, do the same things to them, [your slaves] giving up threatening, knowing that your own Master also is in heaven, and there is no partiality with Him.” Ephesians 6:9 NKJV
Jews and Gentiles
As a Jew, Peter had to grow in the Lord through the power of the Holy Spirit to learn that God has no favorites. He was raised to believe that the Jews were God’s favored people. Never were Gentiles seen as acceptable or called of God. Jesus was sent to the Jews, and even He had to be persuaded by the faith of a Canaanite woman to grant her His healing ministry before it was time for the Gentiles to receive it.
“A Canaanite woman from that vicinity came to him, crying out, ‘Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me! My daughter is demon-possessed and suffering terribly.’ Jesus did not answer a word. So his disciples came to him and urged him, ‘Send her away, for she keeps crying out after us.’ He answered, ‘I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel.’
The woman came and knelt before him. ‘Lord, help me!”’she said. He replied, ‘It is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to the dogs.’ ‘Yes it is, Lord,’ she said. ‘Even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.’
2Then Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted.’ And her daughter was healed at that moment.” Matthew 15:22-29 NIV
Jesus saw her great faith in Him along with her passionate, desperate love for her child. This, not her being a Canaanite, moved Him to heal her daughter. Gentiles did not follow ways of Jewish life. Their religious and dietary laws, their beliefs and traditions, were not practiced by Gentiles. They did not follow Jewish laws and customs and ate foods considered unclean.
In other words, Gentiles did not do all the things that Jews were raised to do. This was the established Jewish faith until Jesus Christ made the way for all people, Jews and Gentiles alike, to enter into God’s kingdom of love. Then Paul was specifically called to bring the good news to the Gentiles, and was received among the brethren. God also specifically dealt with Peter about these changes through a vision, after which he understood that Jesus Christ made unity possible, with no partiality or favoritism.
Here is how this lesson unfolded for Peter:
“…Peter went up on the roof to pray. He became hungry and wanted something to eat, but while the meal was being prepared, he fell into a trance. He saw heaven open and something like a large sheet being let down to earth by its four corners. It contained all kinds of four-footed animals and reptiles of the earth, as well as birds of the air.
Then a voice said to him: ‘Get up, Peter, kill and eat!’ ‘No, Lord!’ Peter answered. ‘I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.’ The voice spoke to him a second time: ‘Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.’ This happened three times, and all at once the sheet was taken back up into heaven.” Acts 10:9b-16 Berean
Peter next ministered a powerful word of Christ’s love for all to those believers, Jew or Gentile, who were gathered with him in the home of Cornelius:
“…As Peter talked with [Cornelius], he went inside and found many people gathered together. He said to them, ‘You know how unlawful it is for a Jew to associate with a foreigner or visit him. But God has shown me that I should not call any man impure or unclean. So when I was invited, I came without objection…’
Then Peter began to speak: ‘I now truly understand that God does not show favoritism, but welcomes those from every nation who fear Him and do what is right. He has sent this message to the people of Israel, proclaiming the gospel of peace through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all.” Acts 10:28-29b;34-36 Berean
What is God’s qualification regarding humans: to fear Him and do what is right. Peter learned a shocking lesson that we all need worked into our hearts. We are not to call any man impure or unclean. This truth that God is not partial and loves all equally is well established in the Old and New Testaments. So why is it that this lesson seemingly is so hard to come to fruition within us?
Jesus made clear that it is not what goes into the mouth, but what is in the heart that defiles a person. Divisive thoughts leading to separation rather than unity are everywhere, causing strife in our homes and lives, in our communities and in the world of nations. It also occurs for those of us who love the Lord and desire to have the love of God fully within our hearts.
“Yet I call this to mind, and therefore I have hope: Because of the loving devotion of the Lord we are not consumed, for His mercies never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness!” Lamentations 3:22 Berean
We thank God that He never fails us in His mercy and love. His love has no limit and cannot be measured. His love for us who serve Him continually operates within, graciously revealing such weeds in our hearts to be pulled up, burned up by the fire of His presence. We are humanly unable to do it without Him. Only He can work love in our hearts for all men, everywhere. It seems hopeless but it most definitely is not!
This is God’s plan and anything He directs us to do, He is able to grow His nature and will within us so it may be accomplished. God’s love is certain. He is love and He is eternally the same. His love is the foundation of His redemptive justice. He demonstrated His intense love for the world when He sent His dear Son to be an eternal sacrifice for everyone.
Therefore, we are enabled to do all things through the Christ within, including greater, more expansive love for one another. We are never separated from His love, that Source that we draw from to love like He loves. And it is an endless Source from which nothing can separate us. Paul spoke of this most powerfully:
“Who shall ever separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? Just as it is written and forever remains written, ‘for your sake, we are put to death all day long, we are regarded as sheep for the slaughter’.
Yet, in all these things we are more than conquerors and gain an overwhelming victory through Him who loved us [so much that He died for us].
For I am convinced [and continue to be convinced--beyond any doubt] that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present and threatening, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, will be able to separate us from the [unlimited] love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Romans 8:35-39 Amplified
God’s passionate love for us all is guaranteed through Christ Jesus our Lord. It’s tempting to believe that we are no longer in the circle of His love when affliction through adversity comes upon us but doesn’t this mirror that false childhood belief about love? When things are going well for us and we’re blessed, then God loves us, but if difficulties arise, He must no longer love us.
God’s ways, however, are so different from ours that being disciplined through affliction is actually a sign of His love! All the afflictions listed are common to humanity, yet they do not separate us from His love but out of His love, His great passion (wrath), He uses them to change us:
“And you have forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons: ‘My son, do not take lightly the discipline of the Lord, and do not lose heart when He rebukes you. For the Lord disciplines the one He loves, and He chastises every son He receives.’ Endure suffering as discipline; God is treating you as sons. For what son is not disciplined by his father?” Hebrews 12:5-7 Berean
We are exhorted to take God’s discipline through affliction seriously, seeing it as a sign of God’s great love for us. Very few things in this life are known to be absolute. The love of God is absolute, with no exceptions. Nothing at all, ever, keeps it from flowing out to the entire world. Remember that: nothing separates us from His love.
No one has perfect parents and wounded children may grow up to wound their children in the same ways they were treated. We parents are all subject to this because we are human. But here’s the good news: Father God is a perfect Parent and always loves us! God Himself Fathered the only Perfect Son. He is able to heal the wounds of divisive, conditional love as He expands our own hearts with love for others. He corrects our parental errors, fills in the gaps and turns it for our good when yielded to Him.
Have you noticed all of God’s creatures respond to genuine, heart-felt love? All wounded creatures melt and are changed when any sense genuine love, compassion, and mercy is extended toward them. There are innumerable examples of people lovingly connecting with animals, both domestic and wild, large and tiny, beasts and bugs. All respond to loving, healing, gentle, and kind interactions with humankind. Some even say that such creatures are much easier to love than our fellow humans!
There may be truth in that, as animals are often used in the rehabilitation of people. Those who love God’s natural creation are used to heal the many mistreated, neglected and abandoned creatures around us. And even the most damaged human souls are reached by God’s love! We often see abused and neglected children flourish in a home where love is patiently applied to their wounds by wise, loving, and understanding parents.
How beautiful are God’s words of love and yet how short we all fall in this greatest gift of God to mankind. If anyone told us humans that there was something that always works and never fails, wouldn’t we all rush out to get it? God’s love is freely given by grace—unearned favor—and His mercies endure forever. There is no limit to the love of God. We who bear the name of Christ can truly be known by our great love for others.
Think of it! Don’t you long for this to be so? The love God would have us extend to others becomes limited not only by divisive judgment or partiality but by fear. It’s not unusual for us humans to fear the different or unknown. If any of you have entered a room filled with others very unlike you, you have a small sense of what it is like for anyone in the minority in our society.
We may also feel our own choices are somehow threatened or being criticized when we see very different paths than our own. Sometimes, we just have too much unbelief in God’s ability to work such love in our all-to-human hearts. But our Lord Jesus Christ came to move us past all of this: “For God so loved the world…” Love truly is the most powerful force in the universe and—think of it— Love lives within us.
When our eyes are open to spiritually see as He sees, God’s love is shown to be above and beyond any other power. Then we recognize the need to heed Paul’s urging:
“Therefore if you have any encouragement from being united with Christ, if any comfort from his love, if any common sharing in the Spirit, if any tenderness and compassion, then make my joy complete by being like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and of one mind.” Philippians 2:1-2 NIV
Paul’s exhortation to unity is based on love, not on doctrine, and the only way the people of God will ever be of one mind is for all of us to have the mind of Christ. Christ is not divided. God is able, but are we willing? We know God hates sin, but He always loves the sinner. He is our model, so He enables us to love the child or adult while hating the wrong or evil behavior.
The truth is we all, adult and child, are in need of love even more when we are being bad, when we are loved in spite of rather than because of what we do. Father God disciplines those He loves for our good. It is redemptive discipline, discipline with a purpose. It does not rely on our mood or situation or personality or past, nor on our ability to earn it by good behavior or good works.
Each child is a gift on loan from God, given specifically to the parents God has chosen, whether birth parents or not. We may draw upon His unlimited love whenever we need it to raise the children God entrusts to us. We, His children, also need to recognize how much God loves us. Do you know anyone who knows all about you, loving you so much that they even know the number of hairs on your head? God does!
God planned for our specific and unique presence in this world, celebrating each of us being birthed into earthly life. Children are birthed to those who do not want them, but the Lord always does. The Lord carefully knit each of us together in our mother’s womb, as David states:
“For You formed my inmost being; You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Marvelous are Your works, and I know this very well.
My frame was not hidden from You when I was made in secret when I was woven together in the depths of the earth. Your eyes saw my unformed body; all my days were written in Your book and ordained for me before one of them came to be.” Psalms 139:13-16 Berean
All people require the security of always knowing they are loved by someone. Grandparents or extended family often provide a sanctuary for children seeking a place of secure love. Without love, any heart shrivels up and becomes hard and bitter. Sadly, many believers don’t know that they are loved, including many of God’s own people quite familiar with the scriptures.
Some even use cultural patterns or traditional ways of parenting that show God as a weapon, threatening His wrath or punishment if disobedient. When one grows up with messages about God that He will get you if you don’t behave, it works fear, not love, in the heart. In contrast, pour out God’s agape love onto a shriveled and damaged heart that has not truly experienced such love. You will see the person begin to change, their heart to soften, their countenance lighten.
Do it as led by the Lord and your reward is with Him, not from the other person.
“There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not been perfected in love.” 1 John 4: 18 ESV
As another’s heart is changed by godly love, their behavior changes as well. Only agape love casts out fear and brings peace. We are freed from the fear of punishment by God when we know how much we are loved, regardless. Jesus came so that we would have a Door to Father God’s love. Agape love is the distinguishing mark of Christians.
Are we yet known for our great love of God and all of His creation? John, the disciple beloved of Jesus, shared this in the full passage:
“Beloved, let us [unselfishly] love and seek the best for one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves [others] is born of God and knows God [through personal experience]. The one who does not love has not become acquainted with God [does not and never did know Him], for God is love. He is the originator of love, and it is an enduring attribute of His nature.
By this the love of God was displayed in us, in that God has sent His [One and] only begotten Son [the One who is truly unique, the only One of His kind] into the world so that we might live through Him. In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation [that is, the atoning sacrifice, and the satisfying offering] for our sins [fulfilling God’s requirement for justice against sin and placating His wrath].
Beloved, if God so loved us [in this incredible way], we also ought to love one another. No one has seen God at any time. But if we love one another [with unselfish concern], God abides in us, and His love [the love that is His essence abides in us and] is completed and perfected in us.…
There is no fear in love [dread does not exist]. But perfect (complete, full-grown) love drives out fear, because fear involves [the expectation of divine] punishment, so the one who is afraid [of God’s judgment] is not perfected in love [has not grown into a sufficient understanding of God’s love].
We love, because He first loved us. If anyone says, ‘I love God’, and hates (works against) his [Christian] brother he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen.
And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should also [unselfishly] love his brother and seek the best for him.” 1 John 4:7-12;18-21 Amplified
We have God living in us through the Lord Jesus Christ. He is love and we are to have that same love, most particularly for our brothers and sisters in Christ. Oh Lord, let this work within us, ever growing and becoming visible in us through Him! Our human love is so often conditional, provided only when earned by what we judge to be good and acceptable behavior. But Father God gives His love and salvation to all, lavishly and without favor. He said so.
God is no respecter of persons. God even loves the unlovable! He still loves us when we are unlovable. We trust the Lord to change our hearts to be filled with the fullness of His love. There’s a desperate need for love in this world. All of God’s people need to know that they are always loved: “For God so loved the world…”
My son taught me a child’s perspective on this when he was 3 years old. As an only child, he sometimes felt…well…alone! It’s easy for any child to sometimes feel ganged up on by their parents but this is doubly so for an only child. There are no siblings to complain to or support them, to at least understand how the child is feeling. Yes, siblings can become part of the problem but they also can mediate by sharing the burdens of childhood. When you are the only one, it’s all about you–and not in a good way when you are in trouble!
Little Chris had been scolded by his father for something, and then I came along and scolded him about something else. He sat his little self down, looking very sad, and said, “Nobody likes me when I’m bad.” Oh, how this broke my heart. It still breaks my heart to think this little guy, so dearly loved and precious to us, truly wanting to please his parents, would believe such a thing.
It was crucial to correct his understandable, but erroneous, conclusion, with God'-given words pouring out to assure our little guy that he was always loved by us and by God, along with hugs and cuddles. If it were only that easy when our older children or the adults in our lives somehow believe that they are not loved by us. Our heavenly Father also has words to reassure us that we are always loved, even when we are falling short of His godly standards. That is His mercy and grace.
Some of God’s people are given a human nature that is perfectionistic, resulting in critical intolerance of any differences, including mistakes that fall short of their ideal. Mercy does not come easily to these exacting natures. Perfectionists have unrelenting standards that may leave little room for God’s mercy and grace. God knows that these children in His family will not only be hard on others but even more harsh with themselves.
Other parents may lovingly, but mistakenly, fail to limit their children, causing difficulties for the child and others who are around that child. This may come from having been treated harshly or having a parent who modeled such imbalanced ways of loving. These children are left to learn limits from others to be able to fit well into society. Babies do need unlimited love, but soon wise parents know to begin teaching their children what is safe and acceptable to do as they grow because they so dearly love them.
God always loves us, most especially when we feel least deserving. As Christian parents, we are able to show as well as tell our children how much God loves them, what a precious gift they are, cherished because they are created by God Himself. Though more challenging, parents who did not receive unconditional love are made anew within by God to grant what they did not receive to their children. Instead of repeating this pattern, they determine in God to break it and He does it for them.
Thankfully, He empowers us all to provide what we lack. God makes it so as He makes all things new. How much our perfect Father loves us regardless of what we have done! He has had to love each of us though we are all imperfect. When we are enabled to absolutely know this, separately from our human way of measuring love, we stop avoiding God or His messengers and run to God our Father when we are in trouble and make mistakes.
We count on the understanding and compassion of Jesus, who was in all points tempted, yet without sin. We seek Him first in times of trouble, even when it is of our own making. In such times, we can give God the ashes of our failures, so that He can make beauty out of them:
“The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me, because the Lord has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor and the day of vengeance of our God,to comfort all who mourn,
and provide for those who grieve in Zion— to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair. They will be called oaks of righteousness, a planting of the Lord for the display of His splendor.” Isaiah 61:1-3 NIV
Beauty for ashes—what an amazing God! What is the splendor of God? Why, it is His very nature! His love, mercy, and redemptive justice are Who He is. How He shines in the darkness of our souls! Out of Zion, God’s heavenly spiritual government, we are to proclaim this good news! From the very highest spiritual place in God’s kingdom, where Jesus and Father God have established the authority of the Throne, this message of love and hope is to be proclaimed.
You will not find a message railing against sinners or divisive, condemning judgment here! God’s wisdom is first pure, then peaceable. The kingdom age is upon us and now is the time to become established in Zion. We are called to know this in our own times of adversity as well as to proclaim this sure word to others who are poor, broken-hearted, in captivity and in the darkness of all kinds of prison houses, literal and figurative.
When people struggle and suffer loss, we can confidently state that it is never because God does not love them! We need not fear the Lord’s vengeance, as it is always redemptive. We could literally go around the world, point out all the troublemakers, including evil doers and ask, “This one, too, Lord? Even this one?” He always says: “YES, EVEN this one.” God will deal with each, now and in the ages to come. Love NEVER fails. Once again, we look at the love chapter:
“Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.” 1 Corinthians 13:4-8a NIV
There is no difficulty, no disease, no hardened heart, no closed door, no wall, no sin, NOTHING that the love of God cannot redeem. How God loves all of His creation, how He rests in His plan for the ages, unfolding in His time and in His way. And consider: He knows everything about us and loves us just the same! What a Friend! How, then, can we come against those God chooses to love?
We enjoy God’s unmerited favor, so what stops us from extending it freely to others? We can be made strong, planted in righteousness like a mighty oak, determined to seek and see His love in all situations. We cannot make ourselves love as God loves, but we can set our will to obtain it through our walk with Him. Thus we are enabled to display the splendor of our God.
What shows forth His splendor more than when genuine love is displayed, one human being to another? But first, we must give God the ashes of our failure to love as He loves. We can go for years recognizing our shortfalling in agape love, but never give them to God so He is able to make beauty out of them. We need to lift the ashes and dust of any fleshly failure to God our Father, with confidence in Him, not ourselves.
We do not need to keep looking at the ashes of our fleshly ways that have failed. We do not need to cover ourselves with ashes because of our lack. We give it all to God, and somehow, time after time, He makes beauty from them. Amazing! We can trust our God to work beauty within and even without in all our messes! There is nothing more beautiful than pure, true and heartfelt love!
We do not have to know how He will make beauty from our ashes, but we learn that He is always prepared to do so. He redeems us and the situation for good because we love Him and are called according to His purpose. God the Father’s love is steadfast. His is that tremendous love He had in order to give His only and most beloved Son, provided for us. There are so many hearts shriveled up from lack of love, hardened and bitter because they do not know, they have not experienced the love of God.
Sadly, some have been further wounded in the House of God. Wounds in God’s fellowships, our Christian family hurt most deeply, and require sensitive ministry for healing. It’s very important to remember how many willful and disobedient children God has and yet He never gives up on us. He is most definitely the expert in loving the unlovable. When we learn mercy from God about those things in which we fall short, we are more able to apply God’s perfect love with others, without scarcity to anyone, child or adult.
All those others, people who are different from us, including partners who are opposites, as well as everyone with differing habits, beliefs, values, traditions, and behaviors, are covered in His love: “for God so loved the world…”God is very fond of all of us. In fact He enjoys our company! We were made to be in relationship with Him. God seems to have a way of making each of us feel special to Him.
And we are—fearfully and wonderfully and purposefully created by Him. God is able to empower every Christian parent to have the love needed so each child knows he or she is special in his or her own unique way. There is enough love to go around in any home that belongs to God, just as there is in any heart that loves the Lord, desiring to be like Him in this world:
“And we have come to know and believe the love that God has for us. God is love; whoever abides in love abides in God, and God in him. In this way, love has been perfected among us, so that we may have confidence on the day of judgment; for in this world we are just like Him.” 1 John 4:16-17 NASB
David’s Psalms 139 confirms just how special and unique each of us are, even though we may not yet realize it on a daily basis. We are each a marvelous work of God! We may erroneously believe God loves those He rewards more than those who do not seem to receive His blessings. That is humanity’s viewpoint, the way of the flesh, which cannot enter in to His kingdom. It is not God! If God thought that having favorites was a good plan, He would have shown us that.
Yes, He does have a chosen people, certain ones of each age called out for higher purposes. This is because of the plans He has made for us, not because He loves those in ministry, or given much revelation, or used mightily of Him, more than the rest of us. And for whom much is given, much is definitely required!
“The servant who knows the master’s will and does not get ready or does not do what the master wants will be beaten with many blows. But the one who does not know and does things deserving punishment will be beaten with few blows.
From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.” Luke 12:47-48 NIV
Thankfully, God’s blows show forth His loving discipline of His servants. We can count on Him to bring a balance in our relationships, enlarging the borders of our hearts to be more like Him in this world. Consider Jabez. There are only a few lines about Jabez in the Bible, but what is there is profound:
“And Jabez called on the God of Israel saying, 'Oh that You would bless me indeed, and enlarge my territory, that Your hand would be with me, and You would keep me from evil, that I might not cause pain! '
So God granted him what he requested.” I Chronicles 4:10. Berean
A prayer to not cause pain to others has high value in the Lord’s eyes. We ask God to enlarge the borders of His presence within us, the territory of our hearts, to make room for more capacity to love others as He does. Our hearts are His dwelling and His kingdom is within us. He seeks those who worship Him with a whole heart. We can trust that He will accomplish all within.
When the sincere cry of each Christian’s heart is to cause no pain, as Jabez requested, God will surely grant these requests. We do get what we ask Him for when we ask with our whole hearts according to His will. We need to grow up into Him, into our Lord Jesus Christ, to meet His standard in relationship with others. The only way is turning again and again to our Lord.
We are in God’s school where He points these things out to us, then cleanses our hearts of all the spots and blemishes remaining. We don’t have to try harder, do better, as many of us were taught in our childhood. We submit to Him and rest in faith that He will do it:
“…for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” Philippians 2:13 Berean
Hasten the day, Lord; hasten the day!
Speak the Word!
In this blog, we talk about the complex nature of humanity, highlighting both the ugliness and beauty within human hearts, and the transformative power of God's love and justice. The blog emphasizes God's redemptive plan, exploring how divine compassion and mercy can change hearts, and delves into the spiritual growth process, underscoring the need for discernment and alignment with God's will in ministering to others.
We know what one human is capable of doing to another, as there is no shortage of evidence showing the consequences of sin. The lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life are always on display in this world. At the same time, we are surrounded by love, compassion and beauty flowing out from humanity. Both exist and are well known in this life.
What if God granted us the ability to see as He sees, revealing everything in the hearts of others? Could we tolerate the ugliness we would see in each heart, including our own, if God chose to reveal it all to us as He sees it? Would our compassion increase or our condemnation and judgment grow towards mankind?
Our Lord is able to see everything and love fully, completely, and unreservedly. It is one of many incredible marvels of His nature. He Who is in us is able to bring that perfect, balance of love and justice. God does this. He loves while seeing everything in this bottomless pit of our human souls. We’re promised that our love will increase in Him as we ask to be more like Him.
We wait, hoping with patient endurance, until our redemption draws complete and it is so, on this side of heaven or on the other. God knows.
“And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.” Luke 21:28 KJV
God’s justice, His dealings with His creation, are always redemptive. Always, in all cases, circumstances and people, redemptive! God’s constant purpose and focus is ultimately to save people from further suffering and pain, to grow new life in the spirit. That is the heart of the Lord Jesus Christ.
As we walk His path for us, we ask: “How will you, Lord, work to bring Your balance of mercy and justice into our hearts, written upon us so there is no imbalance in our response to others?” We know He is able, but of course, it takes time, including ages and ages that are unfathomable to our time-limited understanding. He is able to work the completion of His perfect mercy and justice, as He spoke to the prophet Zechariah:
“And the word of the LORD came again to Zechariah: ‘This is what the LORD Almighty says: ‘Administer true justice; show mercy and compassion to one another. Do not oppress the widow or the fatherless, the alien or the poor. In your hearts do not think evil of each other.’” Zechariah 7:9 KJV
We are not to oppress others around us who are struggling to make it in this world. Note that the admonishment is to our hearts. It is certain that any evil intent in our hearts, unless dealt with by His Spirit, will be revealed in our words and behavior. He is a merciful and just God, who wants good things for us:
“Therefore the Lord longs to be gracious to you, and therefore He waits on high to have compassion on you. For the Lord is a God of justice; How blessed are all those who long for Him.” Isaiah 30:18 KJV
If you have been subject to much hellfire and brimstone teaching, you may have missed this good news! God is not looking for opportunities to chastise and condemn us. He longs to be gracious, waiting to show us the compassion we need. He sees the hunger and need in our hearts for Him, to be like Him. He connects justice, His right judgment and compassion, His mercy, together.
We hope and wait patiently, in expectation of His will to be fulfilled:
“Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope. Because of the Lord's great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness.
I say to myself, ‘The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for him.’ The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him; it is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord.” 3:21-26 NIV
His compassions never fail. We are to be like Him so that our compassions never fail. Our walk, our ministry to others, includes discerning what is in the hearts of others, how desperately we need more of His compassion and love! We need right judgment along with His mercy to handle everything we know with truth in love. We require it as He reveals the ugliness within ourselves, and most certainly require His compassion and mercy to minister to others, either in prayer or in person.
We can be like Him in this, as in all other things as He works His will and His ways within our hearts. He promises we would be like Him and see Him as He is:
“Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is.” 1 John 3:2 NASB
What a powerful promise yet to be fulfilled: to be complete in Him. Is not the Lord continually appearing to us, day by day, creating within us that clean, obedient heart we need? This is surely not a one-time event, accomplished when we first believe. It is a process over time. He appears daily within us, hourly, minute by minute whenever we see Him as He is, how His nature would be in circumstances, and how His spirit would lead us in all things.
Realizing that God’s justice, the judgment He brings, is always redemptive, never vindictive or self-righteous, gives us a stronger sense of our God. Here is a fuller way of seeing and understanding who He is. Many of us have longed to know how to love as He loves, without seeming to overlook the truth of His word about sin. We know and love many people whose life choices are not the same as ours. If there be any grace and mercy as we interact together, could others come to see the Truth as we see it just by being in our presence?
Love is the most powerful force in the universe! Love accomplishes the impossible! Knowing we are loved no matter what opens our ears to the truth in a way that condemnation and judgment never does. God’s truth is good news!
“How lovely on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who announces peace and brings good news of happiness, who announces salvation and says to Zion, ‘Your God reigns!’” Isaiah 52:7 KJV
Good news—this is what we bring to others! We swallow up the darkness with His light. Through years of walking with the Lord, His truth is always revealed as good news. In fact it is often the only good news in our troubled world. It can be difficult to see the goodness of God in the land of the living, in the midst of clouds of controversy and sin! Oh, how our hearts desire to be the bearer of the good news! May we come up hither, to the high places of God, to bring good news to all.
When others really come to know our Lord in spirit and truth, they will fall in love with Him, just as we have. Our Lord accomplished so much just by looking at others. His eyes of truth and love pierce through the darkest countenance, breaking down the resistance and fear this sinful life builds within each of us. How may we be a more true lens through which others can see God as He is?
Could we truly become life and light in this world of darkness? Can we trust Him when He is leading us to speak His word or even just say nothing to someone about our spiritual differences? Are we able to be led by the Holy Spirit to only speak as the Father speaks, just as Jesus did?
“So Jesus said, ‘When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am he and that I do nothing on my own but speak just what the Father has taught me.” John 8:28 NIV
Can we resist the human need to throw in a slight frown, negative tone of voice, or clarifying statement about where they are wrong? Can we keep from showing a face of disapproval while not saying a word unless God directs? Let us truly believe the love of God, which is completely who He is and all contained within it, is the powerful change agent that can touch the other’s heart to free them from bondage. We are learning to rely on His timing, the leading by the spirit, to increase in doing all things well, just as He does.
These are things to ponder we walk along with our Lord, allowing Him to expose and change all that falls short within us. He is correcting all that is coming out in words and behaviors not led by the holy spirit, not profitable for spiritual growth in others or ourselves. Whom we truly love from our deepest hearts are those we desire to please above all things.
God the Father and Jesus Christ, His Son, reward all those who come in a loving relationship with the Master of the Universe. His plans for the world are established and the purposes of His heart of love flow out through all the generations to come:
“But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.” Psalms 33:11 NIV
The Lord knows whose heart is receptive and ready to hear what He might have to say. Jesus certainly did not speak directly to every sinner around Him. There’s no point in the spirit of speaking of things that will not be heard without the hearer having a teachable heart prepared to receive. How many words are wasted or hearts further hardened by human-led instruction to repent, change their ways and serve God?
We’ve likely all done this out of zeal or duty rather than by the spirit leading us to do so. We need discernment to know the time and place. Certainly, we can be ready, and prepared in our hearts to speak the truth in love when it’s time. Paul taught Timothy, instructing him how to conduct himself in what he was called to do.
“In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge:
Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction.” 2 Timothy 4:1-2 NIV
Interesting that Paul puts reproof, rebuke and encouragement all together as part of patient instruction to others. When reproof and rebuke is needed, it is with an intent of encouraging others in their spiritual lives through patient instruction. The purpose is always redemptive. This is speaking truth in love.
Those of us who desire to share God’s word and ways are to always be ready to do so when called upon. We are to be prepared in season, when we would anticipate having opportunity, and out-of-season when the opportunity to speak of God and His word arrives unexpectedly. Let us consider our heart condition—the readiness of the heart when we are speaking to others, both believers and non-believers.
When speaking His word of life we seek discernment about that person’s readiness of heart to hear so it will prosper. If we are led by the Lord, He will check our spirit on many occasions, showing us when ears are closed, hearts are not open to Him or ready to hear. When God speaks a Word in due season, we can be sure that Word does its work, throughout all generations.
His word is not only powerful, but effective—it succeeds! Those who are used to speak this word may not witness the crop that grows, but that’s God’s business. Ours is to be obedient to speak or not to speak, to share the truth in love when the heart is open to receive. We can then trust the Lord to do His will with that word, bringing forth the crop He intends. We can learn how to speak according to the condition of the heart rather than our religious zeal to do good works for God.
God teaches us to follow Him through the promptings of the holy spirit, preparing our own hearts to do so. We are to be like Him, learning to speak as Jesus did—only what the Father instructs us to speak. We can do this naturally and effortlessly, as He did, when we are fully instructed in His ways. We may have a lot to say, but unless it is led by God, it is a waste of time and breath.
Many know so very much of God and His ways that others may not be prepared yet to hear. We hold all truth in God closely, being ready to speak truth in love whenever and wherever the heart conditions are right. How is that different from preaching daily on the street corners or knocking on doors with the message of salvation? God examines the motivations of our hearts for doing these things.
When we act for God motivated by zeal, as a part of a program or duty, we risk sharing with many who are not prepared to hear it. If we are doing such things only of our own accord or at the direction of another human, it does not bring forth the fruit of the kingdom, no matter how sincerely done. It becomes a fleshly activity that can never produce the righteousness of God.
Our actions and activities may be the same as we learn of the ways of the spirit, but the heart of obedience to God’s spirit leads us to assist others in ways that are productive of righteousness. When what we do is God’s idea and not the fleshly plans of man:
"For just as rain and snow fall from heaven and do not return without watering the earth, making it bud and sprout, and providing seed to sow and food to eat, so My word that proceeds from My mouth will not return to Me empty, but it will accomplish what I please, and it will prosper where I send it.” Isaiah 55:10-11 Berean
When we are called, enabled to share the Word of God as He directs, His Word will always prosper when and where He sends it. We may plant the seed, and another reap the harvest, but He will have a crop. There are plowmen and there are reapers, both busy in the kingdom. God is always preparing the ground of our earthly hearts for the planting of His seed.
The religious world has so many programs and plans, motivated by good intentions, to reach the world for the gospel of Christ. Though much good has occurred, these efforts have not produced fruit equal to the labor and investment. It is not what is said and done, but Whose idea it is to begin with. The power is in His word, proceeding from His mouth through those called to be His mouthpiece. Aren’t you glad it is so?
“For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.” Hebrews 4:12 NIV
The Enemy of Our Souls
Here we're arguing that God's judgment is ultimately redemptive, transforming sinners through a purifying process symbolized as a 'lake of fire,' rather than eternal damnation. The blog emphasizes the role of fiery trials in refining faith, underscoring God's plan to use adversities for spiritual growth and the ultimate reconciliation of all to Him.
Aha! Fiery trials are allowed by God. He is in control over our enemy! He created the enemy of our souls as the adversary to strengthen us. Our wise Father created this adversary to destroy our flesh. He was a devil from the beginning, not a fallen angel who has gathered his troops to war with Jesus. Did not Jesus defeat this enemy on the cross?
Though this truth is not popular or widely accepted, it is nonetheless based upon sound scriptural evidence.
“He that committeth sin is of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.” 1 John 3:8-9 KJV
Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ, it is time for this truth to no longer be hidden from God’s precious saints. It is time for Jesus Christ and His army of saints to reap the earth for God’s kingdom. Some prefer to reject the idea that our loving God allows the adversary to work against us in even horrific, evil ways. Many avoid, if not reject, the book of Job that illustrates God allowing satan to come against a righteous man of God.
Through unimaginable loss and destruction, Job learns Who God is and who he, a mortal man, is not. Read Job and you will see that satan did not suggest coming against Job; God did. Job was perfect—God said so—but he had not been tried and tested. He lost everything we would hold dear and still worshipped the Lord with these words:
“Then Job arose, tore his robe and sheared his head. He fell to the earth and worshiped. And he said, ‘Naked I came forth from the belly of my mother, and naked I shall return there. Yahweh, He gives, and Yahweh, He takes away. Blessed be the name of Yahweh.’
In all this, Job neither sinned nor ascribed anything improper to Elohim.” Job 1:20-22 Concordant LiteraL
Job passed this test, brought by Satan under God’s direction as did Jesus when the Holy Spirit—not satan—drew Him into the wilderness to be tested. This aspect of our merciful, compassionate Lord is not easy to understand or accept. His ways are not ours. Our God is a God of opposites, knowing we need the darkness to see His light. How are we to know good if we do not have the contrast of evil? How is darkness noted if we do not have light as its opposite?
His plan from the beginning has been to use the enemy to test and refine us. That’s the mission of the enemy of our souls and he does it well. Never has God lost control of His servant, the devil. God is all-powerful and has no enemies, but we do and victory through Him for all men is sure:
“‘Behold, I have created the blacksmith who blows the coals in the fire, who brings forth an instrument for his work; And I have created the spoiler to destroy. No weapon formed against you shall prosper, And every tongue which rises against you in judgment You shall condemn.
This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their righteousness is from Me,’ says the LORD.” Isaiah 54:16-17 NKJV
Satan, the blacksmith, increases the strength of the fiery trials that we walk through and endure on this earth. As we mature, such trials are more and more like the suffering of Jesus—undeserved, unfair, even cruel. Just as satan tempted Jesus in the wilderness, he puts his thoughts into our minds and hearts, particularly during the inevitable times of adversity in living on the earth. He is God’s instrument, this enemy of our soul, operating in the fleshly realm of our mind, our will, and our emotions.
Satan was created by God for the purpose of affliction and suffering to refine us, just as satan was in the wilderness to tempt and try our Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ now and forever conquers satan within us, over and over. He brings His victory to triumph over every fleshly thought, desire, and emotion that satan is working to plant and increase in us. While weapons are formed against us, His servants, they will not prosper! He promises this!
Earlier verses leading to the above passages provide further context to show that, rather than destroying His creation, God makes a new earth in us:
“To me, this is like the days of Noah, when I swore that the waters of Noah would never again cover the earth. So now I have sworn not to be angry with you, never to rebuke you again. Though the mountains be shaken and the hills be removed, yet my unfailing love for you will not be shaken nor my covenant of peace be removed,’ says the Lord, who has compassion on you.” Isaiah 54:9-10 NIV
God swore that He would never again be angry with humans nor rebuke them as in the days of Noah. Think of it! His compassions are new every morning! This is the heritage of the promises given to Abraham. He will have compassion on us for good. He promised not to again destroy the earth, giving us a sign of this promise in every rainbow in the sky.
“Whenever I form clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will remember My covenant between Me and you and every living creature of every kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life.
And whenever the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of every kind that is on the earth.’ So God said to Noah, ‘This is the sign of the covenant that I have established between Me and every creature on the earth.’” Genesis 9:14-16 Berean
God recalls His promise through the rainbow as a sign to us of His promise never to destroy the earth and all living beings who dwell on it. A rainbow is made by a multicoloured arc of light striking water droplets, most commonly when sunlight strikes raindrops at a precise angle. The colors on a primary rainbow are always in order of their wavelength, from longest to shortest: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet (National Geographic, paraphrased.) Amazing, isn’t it?!
God is light and there is no darkness in Him. The rainbow is an eternal promise of restoration, assuring us God will not destroy people nor any living creature on the earth again. God is a destroyer of sin and death, but not of the creation He made. He loves His creation, this world, so much that He redeemed it through the great and wonderful sacrifice of His son, Jesus Christ our Lord. He set in motion His eternal plan for the ages to redeem us all fully back to Him. Do you really think God’s plan will fail?
Mountains are being shaken, and all those high places where humans are dwelling that are not established by God will come down. Hilly places where the path is more difficult are being moved from our walk as we overcome each adversity. His unfailing love is not shown in spite of these shakings but through them all. He is the One we cling to as He brings these shakings in and around us.
The shaking of all things that can be shaken on this earth is His work in us and others. The apostle James tells us to count it all joy when trials come upon us, because of new growth, the new heaven and new earth that comes from it. This surely makes the Lord’s own distinctly different from others in this world with its increasing upheavals:
“Consider it nothing but joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you fall into various trials. Be assured that the testing of your faith [through experience] produces endurance [leading to spiritual maturity, and inner peace].
And let endurance have its perfect result and do a thorough work, so that you may be perfect and completely developed [in your faith], lacking in nothing.” James 1:2-4 Amplified
We are assured that our many trials are for the testing and refinement of our faith, to perfect us. Many are experiencing this purging as we draw near to Him in this life. He is always coming to us, His temple, dwelling within, where He is building the Kingdom. We are to be clothed with His glory to be revealed in us, His saints. The only way we can consider all our trials with a joyful heart is to know that God is strengthening our faith, producing endurance, through them all.
Endurance is based upon a Greek word that means to “stay; abide, continue, dwell, endure, be present, remain, stand” (Strong’s Concordance). We abide and remain in God and He in us as He works. He develops His precious qualities of gold and silver into our nature, the very inner being of His servants. Adversity brings strength and growth when we submit it to God.
We are destined to be transparent like Him, a pure light in the darkness of this world.
“You are the light of [Christ to] the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden; nor does anyone light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house.
Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good deeds and moral excellence, and [recognize and honor and] glorify your Father who is in heaven.” Matthew 5:14-16 Berean
There is to be no spot or wrinkle in His holy people to be seen for all eternity when reconciliation is complete. Good deeds led by God from a pure heart of love and faith are indeed seen by others. This promise is for those who overcome the flesh, obedient unto death to self. The dying man or woman who has walked with the Lord intimately for many years passes easily through the thin veil between flesh and spirit to come into the presence of the Lord.
But those who are deathbed confessors are naked before God. They have not been clothed with the Christ when passing from this life. How can they be? They have just met Him! This person will be facing God, sleeping until God calls them too be further judged for refinement. It may take ages before the billions who did not know the Lord in this life are awakened to be further changed and clothed with righteousness.
God has a lot of work for His saints yet to do that has never been done, that could not be done until this Day of the Lord. Now is the time to pray for reapers of His harvest of the fruit of the Spirit:
“…His disciples came to Him saying, ‘Explain [clearly] to us the parable of the weeds in the field.’ He answered, ‘The one who sows the good seed is the Son of Man, and the field is the world; and [as for] the good seed, these are the sons of the kingdom; and the weeds are the sons of the evil one; and the enemy who sowed them is the devil, and the harvest is the end of the age; and the reapers are angels.
So just as the weeds are gathered up and burned in the fire, so will it be at the end of the age. The Son of Man will send out His angels, and they will gather out of His kingdom all things that offend [those things by which people are led into sin], and all who practice evil [leading others into sin], and will throw them into the furnace of fire; in that place there will be weeping [over sorrow and pain] and grinding of teeth [over distress and anger].
Then the righteous, [those who seek the will of God] will shine forth [radiating the new life] like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. He who has ears [to hear], let him hear and heed My words.” Matthew 13:36-43 Amplified
All seed sown in the earth of our hearts grows a crop. God allows these two crops, from the good seed of the kingdom and from the evil one, to grow together until the end of the age. Then the weeds from the evil one are gathered up and burned in the fire of His presence brought by His angels, His messengers who bring tidings of great joy. God’s harvest is the nature and character of all souls becoming Christ-like. He sends His angels, messengers of God’s word, to do this reaping at the end of the age.
There is a time, a season, a period where God does this work. It is the crop of weeds, the works of the flesh, that must be destroyed, because no flesh can enter in to His kingdom. It is not the destruction of the earth or its people in which it was planted. Our being is the holy temple of God. He came to save the world, not destroy it. His messengers are sent to gather the crop from His good seed in our earth.
God will reap the fruit of His kingdom, which is in those of us who believe and serve our Lord.
“Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?” 2 Corinthians 6:16 Berean
What do we do with the fruit that has been reaped? Why, we eat it! We all know that the very best, tastiest, most nourishing fruit is picked off the vine and consumed immediately. So too is the fruit of God’s word to be given as a feast of nourishment for others. As we abide in the Vine, others are able to eat the nourishing fruit of His spirit, the love, peace, and joy within us. He has planted His seed and it is growing a spiritual crop that become His harvest.
When the light of His countenance shines with purity from His holy and refined people, others see Him. We are on that path and long for its completion within us. This work is done by holy, righteous people, prepared by God and joined in spiritual Zion. It is done in the rest of the Lord, by the spirit of a purified, united people with no guile. Think of it!
“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away (vanished), and there is no longer any sea. And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, arrayed like a bride adorned for her husband; and then I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying,
‘See! The tabernacle of God is among men, and He will live among them, and they will be His people, and God Himself will be with them [as their God,] and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be death; there will no longer be sorrow and anguish, or crying, or pain; for the former order of things has passed away.” Revelation 21:1-4 Berean
What heavenly words of promise! All of our former dwelling places, on earth and in those spiritual heavens we’ve known, pass away. So does the sea, that sea of unbelief, all the waters of people of the world who do not know Him. John saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God. He descends, coming down to dwell within us fully.
After coming within us for salvation, He completes His coming by making us His holy habitation. This is not a geographical place to which we can point. His kingdom comes without scrutiny, as Jesus said when He told others the kingdom was right there, in Him. He is raising us up to dwell with Him by spirit. God plans to establish His holy habitation in the spirit from spiritual Zion where He rules.
God wipes away tears and death on this earth, for there are no tears or death in heaven! This place of the throne of Jesus Christ and Father God is finally brought to dwell—stay, move in permanently—in and among us—in spiritual Zion, the place where His departed sons and daughters, martyrs and leaders of the faith, are already found while they await our perfection, our completion:
“These were all commended for their faith, yet they did not receive what was promised. God had planned something better for us, so that together with us they would be made perfect.” Hebrews 11:39-40 Berean
In this well-known faith chapter of the Bible, the writer of Hebrews lists many of God’s saints who were commended for their faith. What a powerful, diverse list it is! God’s plan has been to withhold what was promised to these precious saints until we who remain on the earth, having this same calling of faith, are made perfect. One is not to proceed without the other. How they long to see the fulfillment of this most precious promise, from Abraham on through the revelation of John.
No wonder the saints dwelling in spiritual Zion, our homeland, are cheering us on in this day and hour. Dare we believe that now is the time? God does reveal His times and seasons to those who love Him. Many of God’s people, from various walks of faith and regardless of differing doctrines, believe that the Day of the Lord is dawning upon us. We welcome it and are surely in desperate need of it.
Only God can repair, heal, and restore the increasingly desperate conditions we now have on this earth. God grants marvelous and powerful revelatory understanding of these important scriptures for this day. My heart fills with gratitude and appreciation to the many ministers of the Gospel, past and present, who faithfully taught such truths as the reconciliation of all men and the fulfillment of the Feast of Tabernacles.
Many are now all on the other side but the life of their ministries lives on in those of us who were privileged to learn from them. Most of all, I want to express love and gratitude to my husband, Rich Mikelson, for his teachings and revelatory wisdom shared through his Feast of Tabernacles messages as well as in our life together. What a privilege to walk together in God!
May God bless and increase the fruit of the spirit in your hearts, preparing you for the great reaping to come!
Conversations With God
In this blog, we talk about the journey of deepening one's spiritual connection with God, emphasizing the importance of distinguishing God's voice from one's own thoughts and desires. The blog highlights the value of prayer and intercession, the need for discernment, and the joy of experiencing God's love, humor, and guidance in everyday life.
Learning to be led by God’s spirit is a wonderful, unfolding process as we walk with Him. We learn to listen to the spirit, to recognize the difference between our own thoughts, the thoughts of the enemy, and the Holy Spirit. Our Lord may speak words that affirm His truth, or something that is completely unexpected. He may suddenly drop a thought, a name, or even give a picture of someone we do not even know who needs intercession.
Such communications from the Lord are easier to recognize because they are clearly not anything we would think or say. God also speaks a word of correction, a refining of our understanding. He reveals the next step in something we’re doing. He provides discernment on how to pray. Father God also has a sense of humor and can gently tease us. Where do you think we got our healthy sense of humor?
Some people might think this is irreverent but is not humor a part of intimate relationships? We should become comfortable enough in His presence within us to receive all aspects of His personality. We can have a good laugh with the Lord at some of our foolishness! Once when watching a nature documentary revealing the incredible complex and gorgeous natural world of plants and animals, I impulsively said to the Lord, “You are so creative!” He humorously replied, “I know.”
As we tell the Lord how much we love Him, He never tires of hearing it and often whispers back, “I love you too.” God’s conversation is never boring, but ours sure can be! We may repeat ourselves, and surely tell Him things He already knows. How compassionate and patient our Lord is with us as we learn to converse with Him. He does not demand a certain specific format or words to pray, as religion may teach, but accepts any heartfelt communication we share with Him.
When we feel His urging in our hearts to act for others on such spiritual communication from Him, we know it is God’s burden we feel for that situation. Then He provides the perfect word when we are led to share with another:
“Like apples of gold in settings of silver, is a word spoken at the proper time.” Proverbs 25:11 NASB
How we long to always have just such a perfect Word that encourages and edifies others. How precious it is when He grants such words to comfort another’s heart as well as our own. When the spirit is leading the words we share, it is powerful in a way that goes beyond just bringing out a few seemingly relevant scriptures. It’s God’s word and His word never returns void. In this way we are establishing an intimate relationship with God.
So many believers still need to know God really loves them and prefers not to be seen as a distant, unrelatable Lord. He created us for companionship, and, as the Great Giver, delights in giving us an understanding of His ways. This brings the deepest rest of all when we know we are always safe in His love. Such words from Father God and His Son, our Lord Jesus the Christ, are of great value!
No human can promise us that, nor are humans able to fulfill this throughout our lives and beyond. He truly is a Friend at all times, laying down His life for us.
“Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what his master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.” John 15:13-15 ESV
He is always and forever with us, His people, teaching, directing, and giving us wisdom. We need to learn to hear directly from God, to know His voice. Of course, it is also wise to hold a healthy skepticism about what we may think we are hearing from God when it matches a strong desire of our own hearts.
When we say that God told us something, it is not to be said lightly and certainly not as a justification for our own will. God gets credited with many a decision based on our own desires rather than His! Our Father knows what is in our hearts about these matters. We have even seen this in great ministries where leaders state God told them to raise funds for a specific work of ministry or to build a bigger, better building, only to watch as it fails to produce fruit and dies.
When we hear from the Lord about such important things, we do well to wait and rest until confirmation. This may come from the inner witness of His still small voice, an assurance of His will over time, affirming scripture, or a word of confirmation from a brother or sister in Christ. This checks whether we have zeal, rather than the holy spirit, leading us. We have ideas and plans, but we learn to hold them loosely until God confirms.
As our walk with the Lord deepens, we also learn that feeling peace is not the definitive sign that God is leading us in the matter. We do recognize His rest coming from following the path of life He has ordained for us. But we can also feel peace because we do not want to face something we’d prefer to avoid. We have a human desire to avoid the difficult, the controversial, the unexpected, and the loss of our will and ways.
It is not a peaceful process to face upsetting things or difficult, but necessary, changes. Our human, fleshly avoidance of what God has been leading us to do or not do keeps the fear of change at bay. Only God and His ways bring lasting peace in a matter. We may feel a momentary relief at these times but is not the rest and peace of God. There is a continual nudge from God, an awareness that this peace is not His deep, lasting rest in the matter.
As we wait patiently, God confirms His will for us over time and in many ways. He brings a confirming word in scripture, daily reading, or something someone else says as well as the internal voice of the Lord. He speaks to us in song, in nature, in so many other ways. He gives us His rest, far beyond our understanding.
“My sheep listen to My voice; I know them, and they follow Me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one can snatch them out of My hand.” John 10:27-28 Berean
God is always present, willing to strengthen us while we go through the many challenges of life in this world. We are learning to put ourselves in His hands, to rest in Him. When we are seeking specific answers, our brothers and sisters in Christ often have a word of wisdom or guidance that is just what we need, exactly an answer to our prayers. They may not even realize it as we are communicating. It may come in written form, or as a message heard in former times.
As we mature, we recognize His voice with more certainty, just as a child knows the voice of his or her parents. He is most gracious to the sincere heart that truly desires to be led by Him. He wants us to hear Him! We ask others to pray for God’s will for ourselves and others, too. As we continue to present our heart’s motivations to the Lord, He purifies them. We become less susceptible to hearing what we want to hear. Prayer is effective!
“Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.” James 5:16 KJV
Much repetition of our scriptural knowledge is not the key. A heart of wisdom is the critical thing.
“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God.” Colossians 3:16 ESV
All prayer is a conversation with God as we grow in the assurance that He is listening. We have Him within and He is all wisdom, ever increasing His peace and presence. We continually direct our hearts toward the Lord while going about our day. It may not be visible to others, but how lovely and wonderful it is to God. There is nothing that pleases the Lord more than keeping our hearts focused upon Him, with a song of thankfulness that flows out from His presence. This brings rest and peace regardless of outer circumstances.
As intercessors, we bring all burdens to Him and He directs our prayers. In praying for others, God honors the intent of our hearts. It does not matter if we prayed the right way, with specific formalized words or phrases, and there are many inspired spiritual writers who offer them. What does matter is that we pray sincerely in spirit and in truth. Scripture is the truth we can stand upon and guides our prayers according to His will. He looks at our hearts and knows what our motives are as we talk with Him.
But we can make prayer into works by claiming the scriptures or reciting rote prayers, separated from a heart of faith that is led by the spirit. God certainly hears all prayers and understands if we don’t know another way to have a conversation with Him. But sometimes, in our desperation, we fall into demanding healing, blessing, or needs to be met. Desperation, however, is not faith.
We quote scripture as if we must remind God what He promised. I know—I’ve done it! And seemingly unanswered prayers are most difficult, even painful, to comprehend. We know He can do all things, including —or most especially—what is impossible to us. We may batter the ears of God with a prayer that He has no plans to answer with a “yes.” He is able to teach us to pray more effectively, to pray that effectual fervent prayer of the righteous.
We are learning how to pray more powerfully, with greater strength, as the holy spirit guides. Jesus knows all hearts and His prayers are always effective. Further, He says that this type of prayer, an effective and fervent one from the heart of the righteous, is most valuable. These prayers are effective as they come from a pure heart of love centered on His will.
For our prayers to be even more effective, however, God may reveal a specific understanding of the root of a situation. When we only pray for what we see, we are not getting to the root. It’s like trying to cut off the tops of those weeds in our gardens—they will only grow back. How many prayers have we prayed to ask God to change something external, rather than the heart of the matter?
God hears and understands, and will cause growth in our conversations with Him when we do not see lasting change from prayers as often as we’d like. When God gets down to the root of it, the cause of the situation beneath the habit or sin or circumstance, His power is more fully revealed. He removes that root so it can never spring up again! In the garden of our hearts where God has planted His precious seed, He will pull up the weeds in our souls by the roots when we let Him.
God identifies festering wounds, the slings and arrows of this life that have pierced our hearts and become infected. God also identifies wrong motives so that we do not pray amiss. He is more than able to grant full deliverance, a change that is lasting for us and in us, as well as for others. God is able to remove the reasons so no more fleshly fruit grows up to defile us again and again.
Coming into His rest again and again, we learn to pause, to take more time to seek a spiritual understanding of His will at the beginning of our prayers. When the Lord shows us a situation or condition that resists change, we more effectively pray for ourselves and others to have the strength to endure it, surrender to what is by acceptance. and seek what God’s purpose is in the matter. We need wisdom and understanding to handle what God reveals to us in intercessory prayer if or before we share what God has revealed in our intercessory time.
God shares things in perfect timing, but we may not! In our eagerness to share what God has shown us, we may tell someone something they are not at all prepared to hear. The heart must be ready and willing to hear from God. God may even give us specific guidance that is not to be shared with the person requesting prayer. We also may be allowed to share, to plant a seed, without observing any receptivity in the hearer. Some crops take longer to germinate from seed than others. Then we need to get out of the way so God can feed and water this truth.
We may only be the planter, not the reaper. It takes God’s timing for many things to be effective in this walk with Him. It’s like trying to teach a child when the child is upset, crying, and making a fuss. A wise parent will wait until some calm has been restored to teach the necessary lesson in the matter. When we are upset, none of us are in the thinking part, the problem-solving part of our brain and we certainly do not have the mind of Christ when we are distressed.
Instead, we are in the emotional part of our brains, flooded with feelings that overwhelm our ability to consider what we did and how to do it differently in future. At such times, we do not have ears to hear. How do we know this? Neuroscience has found that the thinking part of our God-given brains, called the prefrontal cortex, takes the longest to mature in humans, up to 25 years of age. That’s well past our teen years of unwise, impulsive actions that astonished our parents!
Who knows more about our brains than the One who created them? God has always known that our brain is able to learn throughout our lives, not just when we are young as was thought forty or fifty years ago. After all, true scientific discoveries eventually agree with God, whether He gets the credit or not. God empowers scientists to confirm His truth whether realizing this or not, to further our knowledge and understanding of this life. Science may not be godly, but God is in science!
The most powerful prayers come inbedded in praise and thanksgiving for Who He is. It is always a powerful prayer to praise Him in all things. The apostle Paul says to pray about everything:
“Do not be anxious or worried about anything, but in everything [every circumstance and situation] by prayer and petition with thanksgiving, continue to make your [specific] requests known to God.
And the peace of God [that peace which reassures the heart, that peace] which transcends all understanding, [that peace which] stands guard over your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus [is yours].” Philippians 4:6-7 Amplified
Here’s another key to the process of entering into His rest: everything means everything! From the smallest thing to the most important, from minor issues to potential disasters, we have the privilege of bringing every matter, every decision to Him. He is not going to say to us, His precious children, not to bother Him with the small stuff!His directive to us is as above and it matters not if others think we are strange to pray about everything.
Praying with thanksgiving in our hearts is most pleasing to the Lord, showing our trust in His faithfulness. We thank Him for Who He is before we have the answers we seek. God never tires of hearing from us, even about the same old issues. We learn to acknowledge that He knows best and will do His will for the good of us and on behalf of others. We can even (gasp!) be silent in His presence.
This demonstrates our trust in our heavenly Father. We can always thank the Lord in advance for His faithfulness. We build up our most holy faith by calling to remembrance all that He has given and done for us. We remember all His benefits! There is power in rehearsing the many blessings He has provided, the multitude of answered prayers we have received. But even thankfulness in our hearts must at times be worked out in us by the Lord.
At the beginning of most trials God allows to come our way, it is not easy to be grateful in it. We do not have to be thankful for it, but thankful in it. We thank the Lord, praising Him in the situation, as a demonstration of our trust in His will and His way to resolve it for our good. We are showing our God that we trust Him for answers and that we believe His plan is working things for our good—before it is visible, known to us.
As we gain more of God’s spiritual thinking and purpose, we actually may also become grateful for difficult things that happened, but that surely is easier in hindsight! How many of us testify that the worst thing that happened to us is the same thing that brought us to God or closer to Him? The most crushing event of my early spiritual walk was when my brother died in 1984, and that same event opened my eyes to a different way of understanding His love and mercy.
The growth, strength, and blessing from times of adversity are easier to see after the fact, to recognize benefits from that awful, most painful situation of pain and loss. The Lord enables us to see how these very events bring about change for the good, in us and in those around us. Endings are new beginnings in God. Yes, it is difficult to embrace pain, but God even enables that. Listen to Paul’s testimony:
“So to keep me from becoming conceited [about the abundance of revelation], I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is perfected in weakness.’
Therefore I will boast all the more gladly in my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest on me. That is why, for the sake of Christ, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” 2 Corinthians 12:8-10 Berean
We may not embrace those times we are called to be in God’s “school of pain,” but with spiritual eyes to see and ears to hear, we become most thankful that we have these experiences. The lesson has been learned that when we are afflicted, we most need the Lord and learn most about Him. God is a master at changing our perspective as we allow Him to do so.
In God, endings are always new beginnings, packaged in a way we may not recognize. The hymn “Turn your eyes upon Jesus”, is a well-known Christian song sung by many artists and worshipers through the years. The chorus says this well:
“Turn your eyes upon Jesus
Look full in his wonderful face
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim
In the light of his glory and grace.”
(Helen H. Lemmel)
We turn our focus, our vision, our eyes to Him in praise and worship, not to get, but to give glory and honor to Him. We desire above all to know His purpose and have His understanding in all matters. We eventually learn to pray to hear from God more often than for Him to hear us. After all, God knows everything we are going to say to Him anyway. In Isaiah 58, God chastises His people about the wrong attitudes in their hearts when praying and fasting:
“Cry aloud, do not hold back! Raise your voice like a ram’s horn. Declare to My people their transgression and to the house of Jacob their sins. For day after day they seek Me and delight to know My ways, like a nation that does what is right and does not forsake the justice of their God. They ask Me for righteous judgments; they delight in the nearness of God.
[then they say] ‘Why have we fasted, and You have not seen? Why have we humbled ourselves, and You have not noticed?’ Behold, on the day of your fast, you do as you please, and you oppress all your workers. You fast with contention and strife to strike viciously with your fist. You cannot fast as you do today and have your voice be heard on high.” Isaiah 58:1-3 Berean
Can you see that God is talking about prayer and fasting by His people, those of us who seek Him and delight in knowing His ways? Sinners surely do not do these things. This is His people whom He does not recognize nor respond to their prayers. Such religious efforts are far from Him and His heart of love, being full of wrong motives. God goes on to chastise them for letting everyone know that they are fasting and in intercession.
This hinders their intercession as they want to have others know what they are doing, the sacrifices they are making. They seek a recognition and reward from man, not the pleasure of the Lord. Their purpose is not to hear from God in the matter, but to be heard in order to oppress, cause contention and strife, to strike others. Their focus is on self-gain, on punishment for others’ wickedness.
These prayers are directed at judgment and condemnation rather than freedom, deliverance, and healing. It is not a redeeming change they are seeking from God for others, but chastisement. Isaiah goes on to share what pleases God in fasting and prayer intercession:
“Isn’t this the fast that I have chosen: to break the chains of wickedness, to untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and tear off every yoke?
Isn’t it to share your bread with the hungry, to bring the poor and homeless into your home, to clothe the naked when you see him, and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?” Isaiah 58:6-7 Berean
A godly fast is focused on freeing those in bondage to wickedness, breaking the bondage of others, freeing the oppressed, caring for those in need, asking and waiting to see God work change for others and self in the sufferings of this world. When we see the naked, without godly righteousness to clothe them, we are to clothe them with our intercession. We are not to pray with hardened hearts while appearing holy. That is not pleasing to God.
God cares about how we pray, where our requests come from internally as we come to Him. When God chooses not to reveal His purpose to us as we pray, we may be led to intercede in tongues with words that cannot be uttered:
“We know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until the present time. Not only that, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.
For in this hope we were saved; but hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what he can already see? But if we hope for what we do not yet see, we wait for it patiently.
In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know how we ought to pray, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groans too deep for words. And He who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.” Romans 2:22-27 Berean
Jesus taught us to pray this way:
“And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by men. Truly I tell you, they already have their full reward.
But when you pray, go into your inner room, shut your door, and pray to your Father, who is unseen. And your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you. And when you pray, do not babble on like pagans, for they think that by their many words they will be heard. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask Him.
So then, this is how you should pray: ‘Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name. Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.’
For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive yours. When you fast, do not be somber like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces to show men they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they already have their full reward.
But when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face, so that your fasting will not be obvious to men, but only to your unseen Father. And your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.” Matthew 6: 1-16 Berean
Jesus is teaching principles of prayer, not a repetitive formula we must use exactly every time we enter into prayer. When we pray with wrong heart motives, to be seen by others as religious and holy, the reward is from others, not from God. Yes, we may pray many a formula prayer, designed and shared by someone else when we don’t know yet how else to pray. We may especially search for specific prayers that others in similar circumstances have learned to pray.
All of these are helpful and are heard by our Lord, but as we grow, our prayers become conversations with God. He is also compassionate when we don’t know what to pray other than “Help, God!” As we grow further, getting to know and be comfortable with our Lord, our prayers are heart-to-heart conversations with Father God, through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Words are not always necessary in the most intimate relationships, where both parties are well connected and at home with each other. We surely want an intimate relationship with Him! Our words are not the critical part to God. He already knows it all anyway and discerns our hearts when we do not.
“Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight; everything is uncovered and exposed before the eyes of Him to whom we must give account.” Hebrews 4:13 Berean
God is able to give rest to an intercessor or burden bearer despite the direness of any circumstance in life. There may be times when God makes it clear that He heard our prayers the first time, and that we don’t need to repeat our prayers over and over. During the pandemic, my mental health training business suffered along with the rest of the world’s businesses. Most of us felt helpless about many things during that time.
God gave me this business, it was not my idea. I knew whether this business succeeded or failed was in His hands but I was anxious, not at peace about it. For the first few months, without revenue and mounting debt, I prayed over and over: “God, this is Your business.” After a while, God softly spoke: “I know it is My business.” Well, of course, He knew that, but did I, really?! If I believed that, why was I continually reminding Him of it?
I felt the deep assurance I was heard by the Father. I was then able to thank Him for whatever the outcome. He gave me rest in His direction. Survive or fail, it was up to Him. I had found peace through surrendering the outcome. In that peace, God provided much supernatural assistance such that the business survived and began to prosper again, with all debt paid.
All things are in His hands, whether we can believe that all of the time or not. He is a faithful God who preserves His calling and purpose for us, sustaining all provision when it is in His will. We may pray continually for someone with whom we have agreed to intercede until we know the issue is resolved. That seems like what we should do, right? Yet God may release us from regular intercession to let us know we have been heard and it is now in His hands. Then we need not ask again.
This takes the holy spirit leading us, for sure! We even have times when we are not led to pray, even when many are praying about it. It may not be on our particular list of intercession. It certainly is unprofitable when it just feels like we should pray, as a duty, not heart-felt by the spirit. Occasionally I’ve been surprised by feeling no unction to pray about a worldly situation, perhaps because so many others are already doing so.
Evidence of change is not required as we are led by the spirit to keep praying or to stop. We thank the Lord whether answers are yet seen. Some people have been praying the same prayer about someone or something for most of their lives. God has never told them to stop, as some prayers take a lifetime or beyond to be fulfilled. We are also led to know when the Lord is saying “It is enough.” These prayers are but for a time, a season, even a moment in Him.
Yes, there is intercession that requires repeatedly asking, seeking, and knocking until there is a breakthrough. The prayers for His will to be done in our earth is one of them. This is the case when we are doing battle with those unknown spiritual forces that rule the earth and its ways, including spiritual wickedness in high places. We prefer answers that are given in just a moment, but scriptures reveal the many times saints battled while waiting for God to send His messengers, His angels, to intercede.
Here’s the point: God knows the period of time for prayer and intercession. The key for us is that prayer comes from a heart of faith in those who love Him. This brings true rest to the people of God.
“You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he trusts in you. Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord God is an everlasting rock.” Isaiah 26:3-4 ESV
God is the only One we can talk to about everything. Oh, the secrets God keeps for each of us! Even in consistent prayer about heavy burdens and critical matters, He is able to lead us into His rest, a rest like we have never known. We are learning that all things are in His hands.
God will keep refining and purging us, swallowing up the old with the new, including our conversations with Him, until we shine forth as pure gold. He rested from His works on the seventh day, so we are to rest as He did. What a provision He has made for us to pursue in this life and the life to come!
Our Expected End
Here we're exploring how God often chooses seemingly unlikely individuals for His work, emphasizing that external qualifications and societal standards are secondary to one's heart and obedience to God. The blog illustrates this through biblical examples, highlighting that God values inner disposition and faithfulness over external appearances or status, calling us to recognize and embrace this divine perspective in our own lives.
“For consider your calling, brothers and sisters, that there were not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble; but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong, and the insignificant things of the world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that He may nullify the things that are, so that no human may boast before God.
But it is due to Him that you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption, so that, just as it is written: ‘Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.’” 1 Corinthians 1:26-31 NASB
It is enlightening to consider whom God has chosen through the ages to do His work. What can we learn by examining the Lord’s called and chosen? What was their expected end? Take a look at the lineage of Jesus Christ and you will see individuals who would not make the top 10 list in our present religious world. Sometimes it appears we have forgotten where we came from and all the imperfect people God uses in His Kingdom. After all, imperfect people are all He has to choose from!
The Lord makes clear to us that He does not choose as humans do. We’re grateful that He sees the heart rather than demonstrations of outward ability, stature, prestige, skills or wealth. He chooses many who lack the external qualifications to do what He has planned. He supplies everything needed to do what we are called to do. Therefore, the glory and honor is all His, not ours.Jesus knew the plans Father God had for His disciples and chose each according to God’s leading.
There are humorous anecdotes written about why each of the disciples would not make the position of elder in today’s churches. Peter would not be chosen because he had a quick temper. James and John were too hungry for power and position, plotting to manipulate their way to be on the right and left hand of Jesus. Judas would betray Him to the Romans, yet Judas was chosen, too. All of them were deserters when Jesus was arrested, lying out of fear, denying that they even knew Him.
These twelve men, honored disciples of the Christian foundation Jesus established, had obvious faults and made mistakes. He had to break up conflicts among them as they jockeyed for position. They frequently seemed slow to understand. More than once, Jesus had to explain things to them, correcting their assumptions about applying His Lordship to the earth instead of the spiritual kingdom of God.
Remember, they did not have the Holy spirit to enlighten their minds until the Holy Spirit fell on that long ago day in the Upper Room. Jesus occasionally sounds a bit weary of explaining the spiritual meaning in His ministry, particularly after all the intimate times of fellowship and teaching He had shared with them. He said there were too many things difficult to understand that they had no ability to hear before He died and rose again.
The disciples were all Hebrews in the area, with differing occupations and family backgrounds irrelevant to His calling them as disciples. God knew them, however, knew what was in their hearts, what their potential would be. Moreover, since Jesus only did and said what the Father showed Him to say and do, these 12 men were Father God’s choice. That was all that mattered.
Not so since then. What has happened through the centuries to the churches of God? When you really think about it, it’s a sad commentary on how we have come to put so much weight on external things like education, including religious education, social status, political influence, wealth, age, profession, the details of dress, hairstyle, habits of food and drink, companions, church attendance, and yes, family name and heritage.
Such is the way society decides worth and qualification but is surely not God’s way of looking at people. God cares more about a man’s heart than all those things we mark as significant. Culturally, there are many external rules by which Christian women are judged and woe to the woman who does not comply. God cares more about a woman’s heart than her outer adornment. Paul admonishes godly women about this:
“Your beauty should not come from outward adornment, such as braided hair or gold jewelry or fine clothes, but from the inner disposition of your heart, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is precious in God’s sight.
For this is how the holy women of the past adorned themselves. They put their hope in God and were submissive to their husbands.” 1 Peter 3:3b-5 Berean
Paul is not forbidding outward adornment nor making a law that women should not have or do these tings. Paul is establishing a priority of God’s, saying that God’s way is to look at what is in the heart regarding the purpose He has for a woman. There are gorgeous women whose dispositions ruin their beauty. The beauty of the Lord is found in the inner disposition, in the gentle and quiet spirit of a woman at peace. Such is precious in God’s sight because it is costly.
Such is is the work of the spirit creating an inner change through an overcoming process that brings peace without fear. There’s more in that passage, but the point is this: we absolutely cannot tell by outward appearance who belongs to Him. In fact, God loves the whole world, whether they know they belong to Him or not. Recall that in the Old Testament, He did not pay attention to signs of godliness before He called someone.
God does not consider most of the qualities by which many, today, assess someone's worthiness to be used by God. The Lord looks at His plan and our potential, knowing the end from the beginning. In His calling, some are led to excel in outward ways, becoming formally educated to open doors in work and professions that would otherwise be closed. Thus God’s people excel in many and varied fields, and even garner wealth for His kingdom.
But none are a requirement, none qualify them as eligible for the calling in His service. None of these things are outward evidence of righteousness. He is the only necessary foundation, to be called and chosen as one of God’s faithful, used as a servant for His people. God has many counselors in His kingdom, whether in the field of professional counseling or not. God has many ministers and not all of them are called Reverend, Pastor, or Father.
Why would our Lord not call people in all kinds of walks of life? He needs people everywhere! God’s people in all walks of life have a purpose to reach others with His love. That cannot happen when we only engage with others who believe as we do and already share our faith. It also is not sufficient to leave the service of ministry to those who are called ministers by profession.
How is He, then, able to reach those who will never visit, even actively avoid, formal religious groups or gatherings called the Christian church? We are not called to only care for our own, although it surely is more comfortable to gather with people just like us. But where’s that deep darkness out of which we are to shine? Isn’t it everywhere God calls us to go? We are to be a light in the darkness of this world, to be in it but not of it.
When Jesus was nearing the time of His crucifixion, He prayed for His disciples this way:
“I will remain in the world no longer, but they are still in the world, and I am coming to you. Holy Father, protect them by the power of your name, the name you gave me, so that they may be one as we are one. While I was with them, I protected them and kept them safe by that name you gave me. None has been lost except the one doomed to destruction so that Scripture would be fulfilled.
I am coming to you now, but I say these things while I am still in the world, so that they may have the full measure of my joy within them. I have given them your word and the world has hated them, for they are not of the world any more than I am of the world. My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of it.’” John 17:11-12; 14-16 NIV
Jesus left this world, but even when He was here, He was not of the world nor were His disciples. Jesus did not ask Father God to take us out of the world, but to keep us from the wicked one while remaining here to fulfill God’s calling in Christ Jesus. People are vitally needed in the world to do the great work of bringing the news of our Savior to all through the brightness of their godly lives. The disciples were not taken out of, but instead, left to do the work they were called to do. They had an expected end in Him, much more than they knew before His crucifixion and resurrection.
The callings of the Lord and our expected end in Him come as quite a surprise to many of us. At the beginning of God’s journey for us, we may never have even dreamed of the specific paths we would take with our Lord. He reveals He plans as we seek His ways and walk His path for each of us. God chooses those He will use, and what they will become is often the opposite of what is apparent when they begin to be used of Him.
Oh, how His thoughts and plans are higher and certain is our expected end in Him! Old Testament saints had human faults and weaknesses that would seem to disqualify them now. The Christians of Paul’s era would certainly not have chosen Saul, the fiery persecutor of Christians. But God knew what was in Saul’s heart, that he believed he was doing the will of God. He was upholding and fighting to preserve his Jewish faith with all his being in the best way he knew.
God planned for a nature change so he would become Paul, the great apostle, preparing Him to minister to the Gentiles and founding the early church bodies spread in Asia. Think of it, Saul did not pray and accept Jesus as His Savior. Instead, God zapped him with the reality of Jesus Christ right in front of him, swallowing up Saul, blinding Saul to the past, and then opening Saul’s eyes in a new nature called Paul. And what a gift He has been and still is to the saints!
God does see the end from the beginning and our expected end is a good one! Be encouraged, saints of the Lord! He has promised a beautiful conclusion for all creation. Our expected end is already set and it is good news! He has called and will continue to choose many men and women to further us all along His path. He continually chooses those who are unqualified in society’s eyes, then and now.
Even the Father of our faith, Abraham, had a few character defects! Yes, in the Old Testament, Abraham was a great man of faith, yet he lied, more than once, about Sarah being his wife. Abraham and Sarah were going to travel, so, fearing the authority of rulers whom they were visiting, Abraham got Sarahs agreement that he would tell others that Sarah, his beautiful wife, was his sister.
This surely placed her in some very awkward and potentially dangerous situations, one of which is described in Genesis, the account of Abraham lying to Abimelech by saying Sarah was his sister. Because of that lie, Abimelech was going to take Sarah, a most beautiful woman, for his own. As both Abraham and Abimelech knew, in those days a king could choose whomever he wanted.
Fortunately, God intervened, not with Abraham but with Abimelech. When God revealed to Abimelech that Sarah was actually Abraham’s wife and that Abraham had deceived him, he was horrified to have almost done something so offensive to God and man. And here’s Abraham’s excuse:
“Because I thought, surely the fear of God is not in this place; and they will kill me on account of my wife. But indeed she is truly my sister. She is the daughter of my father, but not the daughter of my mother; and she became my wife.
And it came to pass, when God caused me to wander from my father’s house, that I said to her, ‘This is your kindness that you should do for me: in every place, wherever we go, say of me, ‘He is my brother.’” Genesis 20:8-10 KJV
There it is: a rationalization from this great man of God! Sarah was his half-sister, but Abraham used this with guile, misrepresenting the truth to others out of fear. It’s a rather flimsy excuse to say she is truly his sister when she is also his wife. How frightening for Sarah to be taken by Abimelech to be his wife, in spite of her agreement to do as Abraham said! There’s even an implied blame on God, who “caused me to wander.”
Doesn’t this sounds like our typical human excuses in our ears today: “I had to do it; I had no choice; You, God, got me into this by causing me to wander and be in danger because of her beauty. Sarah was your choice. What was I to do?” We wouldn’t even accept that from any of the teenagers we know! God hates lies and in no way was Abraham in the right. It was something about which God had to deal with him on his way to becoming who God called him to be.
Consider, however, if this story went around in today’s religious circles. Would Abraham have been allowed to explain, to repent, be forgiven of such sin, to continue to become that great man of faith who became the father of all people of faith? Or would he have been immediately disqualified by the brethren and tossed out on his ear?! Just like the rest of God’s called and chosen people, over time and with more experiences, Abraham grew in his faith, matured, and passed the greatest test of all.
God knew Abraham’s expected end was to be a man of faith, even called a friend of God. Let’s look at this great man of faith later, when he was enduring the most difficult test of his life. God had ordered Abraham to sacrifice Isaac, his only son and long-awaited child of the promise God had given him and Sarah:
“Some time later God tested Abraham. He said to him, ‘Abraham!’ ‘Here I am,’ he replied. Then God said, ‘Take your son, your only son, whom you love—Isaac—and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on a mountain I will show you.
[Abraham did so and was lifting his knife to kill Isaac]…But the angel of the Lord called out to him from heaven, ‘Abraham! Abraham!’ ‘Here I am,’ he replied. ‘Do not lay a hand on the boy,’ he said. ‘Do not do anything to him. Now I know that you fear God because you have not withheld from me your son, your only son….
‘I swear by myself, declares the Lord, ‘that because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your only son, I will surely bless you and make your descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky and as the sand on the seashore.
Your descendants will take possession of the cities of their enemies, and through your offspring, all nations on earth will be blessed, because you have obeyed me.” Genesis 22:1-3;11-2;15 NIV
Obedience was what the Father required for Abraham to receive the promise. He is not the only saint that God tests in telling us to sacrifice the very most important thing in our lives. The question He allows us to answer is this: who or what do we adore? The evidence of whether God is the most important or there is someone, something else, on the throne of our hearts, becomes crystal clear.And how often it is our own child, that most precious gift of God.
Sometimes it is a test of surrender that is passed when God sees our obedient heart, just as He did with Abraham. There are also many important things in this life the saints of God have been called to lay down that are never restored. Isaac was a part of God’s plan and purpose for Abraham’s future, his expected end. The outcome was ideal in this case but it’s God’s choice. He leads us one way and not another.
As a young person, I strayed from walking with the Lord in college. A few years later, I had fallen in love with the Lord again. At that time of renewal and recommitment, I recall having 3 requests for things that were most important to me. Two of the three were marvelously granted, one within a year, while another took years to be fulfilled. A third was denied and the cause of much pain and loneliness at the time.
I was being taught that it’s a process, not an event, to learn to sacrifice immediately and with a whole heart, that which we value and find precious more than God. As we mature, He changes the desires of our hearts so we begin to lose our desire for anything that He does not want us to have. We have no ambition to become anything that is not His future for us, nor hang on to the present when He moves on.
We begin to realize, to accept, and even rest in knowing that God is in charge and it’s best to get out of His way. We gradually cease our struggles with His will for us, more easily yielding our will to His, questioning less what He allows along our path of life. We become like Abraham, who answered immediately “Here I am” at God’s call. His heart was quick to respond, ready to obey. He knew the voice of the Father and followed through without question. This is a heart that has practiced surrender!
What a powerful test He set for Abraham, to sacrifice his one and only son, long-awaited and beloved! Nothing is more challenging than when God tests us in the people and things we love most. For today’s Christians, it is hard to relate to Abraham’s immediate obedience to God’s directive about sacrificing his only child, even horrifying even to imagine it. In those days, other religions surrounding Abraham and Sarah commonly sacrificed children to their idol gods, so it was more culturally prevalent.
We don’t know what Abraham thought but the way it is recorded implies immediate, unquestioning obedience. There is nothing written about Him having a discussion with God about it, as most of us would have done. Abraham also loved Sarah and one wonders if Abraham even told her about it Any of us who are mothers, let alone the mother of an only, precious, and long-anticipated son, are most thankful that this has not been our test.
Christian parents, however, have yielded their children to God’s calling that later took their lives. We know believers who have lost a child. It’s incredible to think of what so many Christian parents have gone through in losing their precious children. What God has worked within them through these incredibly painful losses!
Abraham was a flawed human but he trusted God with Isaac, no matter what. We don’t know if, in his heart, he thought God would raise him up, or what else contributed to his incredible act of obedience. Clearly, Abraham was a man of faith with an instantly obedient heart. Yet God knows how that is, as Father God sacrificed His only begotten Son for us! Think of it! He had the power to save Jesus immediately and Jesus knew it. God saw all that happened and did not intervene. How was that for the heart of Father God, watching Jesus suffer and die?
Isaac’s behavior is something to marvel about as well. These scriptures reveal that Isaac had been taught obedience to Abraham and trusted him. The account says that he went with his father and only asked about the needed sacrifice for worshiping God. He allowed his father to tie him on the altar of sacrifice. What did Isaac say or do, while laying there, helpless, when his own beloved father lifted up his knife to kill him?
God asked for what was most precious to Abraham and Abraham passed the test. He did not remind God of all the promises God had already given to him and Sarah, all the future that would be lost should Isaac die. Abraham’s type of unquestioning obedience is worth more than gold to God, more than being well educated, attractive, high in stature and wealth or any other external qualifications society may consider.
Examples of Expected Ends in God’s People
Abraham’s faith far surpasses his earlier character faults that led to lies and deceit. It is most precious in the sight of God. God said about another called and chosen leader, David:
“After removing Saul, he made David their king. God testified concerning him: ‘I have found David son of Jesse, a man after my own heart; he will do everything I want him to do.’” Acts 13:22 NIV
God trusts that David’s heart is after His own heart. God knew David’s expected end as well as all the events that would continue to shape Him into Israel’s great warrior king. It certainly did not appear as if David, the lowly tender of sheep, would be the chosen son of Jesse. Yet David had been in God’s school of obedience as a shephard alone in the fields, watching over his father’s sheep. He was being prepared while neither noticed nor seen as significant in the eyes of others, particularly his own family.
David had been learning how he could defeat the lion and the bear attempting to attack his father’s flock. Consider what bravery, strength, and ability that must have taken! It fully prepared David to defeat Goliath with faith that nothing and no one could stand against His God. Yet later in King David’s life, he became a deceitful murderer because of his lust for Bathsheba. God did bring him to repentance through Nathan the prophet, yet how did this great King with a heart for God continue in such sin?
Is this the same man who sought God’s direction before every battle, who did not harm Saul though Saul wanted to kill him, the author of all those beautiful psalms? During that period of David’s life, he surely did not appear to be God’s anointed! Still, David had a heart for God and that tender heart repented when confronted with his actions. David did not defend or explain his sinful actions to Nathan as many of us may attempt.
Can’t you just hear some of the present day excuses for such behavior: “Well she should not have been bathing nude so I coud see her!” Or, “I could not help it, I wanted her so much.” Or “I’m the King and I will not be denied whatever I desire.” David, instead, took responsibility for sinning against God. We humans have a thousand excuses to try and justify what is clearly wrong, but David does not say any of that. His immediate response is “I have sinned against the Lord.”
Though David was forgiven, there were consequences God decreed for David. The baby he conceived with Bathsheba died. God allowed turmoil in his family and his kingdom. But what is even more astounding is what comes after this. It is not the expected end we would predict for adultery! Bathsheba is brought to David’s residence and becomes another of his wives. She conceives again and has Solomon, who became David’s successor, the most successful of Israel’s rulers.
This came about by manipulation by Bathsheba to have David, who was on his deathbed, choose Solomon rather than other sons who were vying for the crown. Think of it! This adulterous woman birthed the next king in God’s glorious nation of Israel. It is understood that David was the initiator and adulterer, but so very many societies blame the woman for sexual sin while the man is seen as seduced or led away by her allure. Never mind that Bathsheba could not refuse the king’s demand to come to him while married to Uriah. Never mind that she loved her husband and mourned his death.
Bathsheba had not been looking to be unfaithful to her husband. How hard it must have been for her, even with the honor of being chosen by the King. Yes, things were different then. Women did not have freedom or power over their own lives. Men of power and authority, then—and sadly, still now—take advantage and use their authority with women for their own selfish ends, blaming women for their own lusts. Though it takes two, women in those days, and now in many places in the world, are judged harshly for adultery.
What pastor or leader presently would not be judged when such an illicit affair became known to others? What kind of judgment would fall on Bathsheba’s head? What dishonor some would place on the innocent child of such a union. But God looked at the higher purpose within what was culturally acceptable at that time. The issue here is the attitude of our hearts when such things occur. How many judge the innocent child because of how and who concieved him, regardless of God’s purpose in allowing the child to be born?
Would we be tempted to gossip about where Solomon came from, how wrong it is for him to have all that he has, given his “pedigree?” Would we accept the son of this union, so sinfully begun, as our next religious leader, deserving of the most glorious kingdom of wealth and splendor the world had ever seen?
There likely would be comments from some about where Bathsheba came from, what she did to entice the King, and how she happened to birth the next king. Adultery is wrong, of course, but God’s chosen do err. Though the circumstances of Solomon’s birth were far from ideal, God had an expected end that would surprise many today. He was God’s choice, having an expected end for His plans and purposes.
Then there is Rahab, the prostitute, one of the despised Canaanites, who helped Joshua when he was attacking Jericho. She hid the spies and saved her family. She was a woman of faith, telling the spies that everyone was afraid of their God whom she knew would give them the victory. That is a statement of faith already established within Rahab for God to use her with His people.
When the king of Jericho asked about the Israelite spies in his city, she lied about their whereabouts in order to protect them and save her own household. Later, she told them why:
“Before the spies lay down for the night, Rahab went up on the roof and said to them, ‘I know that the Lord has given you this land and that the fear of you has fallen on us so that all who dwell in the land are melting in fear of you.
For we have heard how the Lord dried up the waters of the Red Sea before you when you came out of Egypt, and what you did to Sihon and Og, the two kings of the Amorites across the Jordan, whom you devoted to destruction. When we heard this, our hearts melted and everyone’s courage failed because of you, for the Lord your God is God in the heavens above and on the earth below.
Now therefore, please swear to me by the Lord that you will indeed show kindness to my family because I showed kindness to you. Give me a sure sign that you will spare the lives of my father and mother, my brothers and sisters, and all who belong to them, and that you will deliver us from death.” Joshua 2:8-13 BSB
Rahab was not just an innkeeper, she was running a house of prostitution. Yet God saw the faith in her heart and used her in a mighty way. She not only knew the history and victories of the Israelites, she made a confession of faith in their God. She became part of God’s people and, moreover, is in the lineage of Jesus Christ through the birth of Boaz (Matthew 1:5).
How this flies in the face of all those who judge people by the family who produced them, or children by the culture, heritage or characteristics of their parents! Would some of us even be seen with a woman of such reputation today? God trains those of an obedient heart to become who He wants them to be. He brings each of His called and chosen to an expected end in Him.
Each of these flawed biblical characters fulfills God’s destiny for them. In fact, the way God does things, their very sins and flaws shaped them along the way. God dealt with them, maturing all to fulfill His plan. Because of the condition of their hearts, they are submissive and quick to obey. God always has plans for such as these, teaching them to grow up into their calling.
The great Apostle Paul is the first to say he had all the best external qualifications for a religious Jew of his time. He was well-known and respected as an educated, knowledgeable and prominent Jewish leader and scholar. If anyone deserved to be a religious leader of the Jews, Saul (Paul) checked all the boxes. But Saul was deceived, not realizing that he was persecuting the Lord he was attempting to defend.
Such behaviors made him the last person the Christians of his day would want on their side. He was the enemy of the cross! But God saw something else in Saul’s future. When Saul met the Lord, he was fully converted, called Paul, and set out to fulfill his calling to minister the gospel to the Gentiles. When God opened his eyes, Paul counted all his knowledge, qualifications, and stature of that former Jewish life as rubbish.
In Acts, Paul lists all his impressive external credentials. He had done everything right according to his religion, but it was not right in God’s eyes:
“I am a Jew, born in Tarsus of Cilicia, but brought up in this city. I studied under Gamaliel and was thoroughly trained in the law of our ancestors. I was just as zealous for God as any of you are today.
I persecuted the followers of this Way to their death, arresting both men and women and throwing them into prison, as the high priest and all the Council can themselves testify. I even obtained letters from them to their associates in Damascus, and went there to bring these people as prisoners to Jerusalem to be punished.” Acts 22:3-5 BSB
Saul was zealous for God, doing what his religion had trained him well to do. But after Jesus completely changed his understanding, his viewpoint, his eyesight, in an instant, here’s what Paul thought of his external and impressive Jewish resume among the Jews:
“For it is we who are the circumcision, we who worship by the Spirit of God, who glory in Christ Jesus, and who put no confidence in the flesh— though I myself could have such confidence. If anyone else thinks he has grounds for confidence in the flesh, I have more: circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin; a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to the law, a Pharisee; as to zeal, persecuting the church; as to righteousness in the law, faultless.
But whatever was gain to me I count as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things as loss compared to the surpassing excellence of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not having my own righteousness from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God on the basis of faith.” Philippians 3:2-9 Berean
Saul had an instantaneous change when he was blinded by the voice of Christ on the road to Damascus. Saul’s name change to Paul signifies the change in his nature that God had done. God had much for Paul to do so a rapid change by God was necessary. Paul’s very zealousness and love for the law, the way he had been demonstrating his faith and love for God, was turned to fulfill his calling in Jesus Christ. That same quality of passion for God and commitment to Him making Saul an excellent Jewish leader remained in Paul’s heart of faith.
Paul left all of the outward Jewish achievements, considering it rubbish, to pursue the Lord Jesus Christ. What a humanly unexpected end for the great persecutor of Christians of the time! Paul is one of many, many examples where God uses our weaknesses as strengths in Him. God’s thoughts are not ours and His ways are not our ways–but God wants them to be! Paul recognized that his former righteousness under the law, so highly valued in the religious circles of that day, was less than worthless in God’s spiritual kingdom.
Though Paul’s stellar Jewish history, accomplishments, and religious stature may have given him “street cred” in today’s vernacular, it actually worked against the conversion of God’s own. Good thing his calling was the conversion and ministry to the Gentiles, as it took a while for him to be received by his fellow Jewish Christian disciples. Human nature is fallible, so God is never surprised when we humans don’t behave like one would expect His people, particularly His leaders, to behave.
God’s leaders are, indeed, held to a higher standard, as David’s repentance along with consequences, illustrates. There is redemptive justice—discipline for change— but He knows the end from the beginning. Thankfully, when He calls us, He knows all about us. He calls us knowing we have flaws or sins within, as all do. Paul’s heart to do right was worth a great deal to God, regardless of the error of his ways.
Paul knows what it means to show the Christ to others:
“Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others.
Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.
And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.” (Philippians 2:3-8 NKJV
Jesus Christ our Lord, the Perfect Son, did not grasp equality to His Father, though He was sent to do God’s will. He is the Son of God and a servant to all. As with our Lord, the Pattern Son, it is a heart of obedience that God prioritizes above all else in those called to work in His kingdom of peace and love. He chooses whom He pleases, understanding our sinful choices and behaviors, flaws in our natures, how we miss the mark by mistakes, the stupid “in the moment” decisions, lies we think necessary to save ourselves, all the sins of the flesh that first showed up in the Garden of Eden.
“For God’s gifts and His call are irrevocable. Just as you who formerly disobeyed God have now received mercy through their disobedience, so they too have now disobeyed, in order that they too may now receive mercy through the mercy shown to you.” Romans 11:29-30 BSB
God does not change His calling. He chooses imperfect people, those who have issues and flaws, cleaning each of us up while He is preparing us for what He has called us to accomplish. He shows mercy to those who love Him and are called for His purposes. He could do it all without people, but He looks at the teachable heart that loves Him to be used to bring all further into Him.
God does everything well! He even brings children into the world that are needed here, on this earth, for such time and purposes of each era, regardless of the circumstances of their parentage. God is no respecter of persons and loves to use the most unlikely, often improbable, people and situations to show forth His might and power. These are people who would be rejected, held in low regard, by the society around them, then and now.
His perfect redemptive judgment looks at the heart and sees so much more than can be understood by hearing outward descriptions of someone’s past or external present qualifications. He chooses men and women of faith who have a teachable spirit and a heart for God. All of the unlikely and flawed people God chose in the Bible give hope to each of us.
What we think disqualifies a person in God are often the very things God is using to qualify us to fulfill our expected end! Are we able to discern His ways within ourselves and our fellow believers?
“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.” Jeremiah 29:11 KJV
“For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:11 Berean
He uses those He has called to serve Him with their whole hearts. The flaws, the lack of external qualifications only make it more clear that it is God who is doing this work. Yes, He knows what He plans for us and goes right past our faults and failures to create obedient servants, fit for His work. Our expected end in God are often quite different than what others predict for us, let alone far surpassing what we thought was possible.
You see, God looks at the hearts and searches for those who will love and obey Him, regardless. God’s people have the opportunity to show forth His praises on the earth. We join Paul in saying: “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord!”
More On Reconciliation
In this blog, we talk about the Christian concept of universal reconciliation, emphasizing God's love and eternal plan to redeem all humanity, not just Christians. The blog challenges traditional views of eternal punishment and advocates for understanding God's mercy and justice in bringing all souls, including those who haven't known Jesus in life, to salvation.
One would think that the truth that all men will be saved, all reconciled back to God, would be welcomed with joy by all Christians. Our loving and merciful God has an eternal plan to redeem the entire world, dead and alive, back to Him. The most well-known scripture of all states that God loves the world, not just Christians. Yes, He comes to whosoever believes, which will happen over the eons.
“After He was found in [terms of His] outward appearance as a man [for a divinely-appointed time], He humbled Himself [still further] by becoming obedient [to the Father] to the point of death, even death on a cross.
For this reason also [because He obeyed and so completely humbled Himself], God has highly exalted Him and bestowed on Him the name which is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow [in submission], of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and that every tongue will confess and openly acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord (sovereign God), to the glory of God the Father.” Philippians 2:8-11 Amplified
Our Lord Jesus Christ made a way for everyone to be reconciled, redeemed from sin and death. Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess—that is what He said. God loves the world and made a way for all, not just those called by His name in this present era. In the hours between His death and resurrection, He ministered to the souls in Hades who had no opportunity to know Him. It may take ages, but there is a time when everyone will know that Jesus Christ is Lord and worship Him.
Does an eternal hell bring glory to God the Father? Does a just, merciful, and all-powerful God allow the enemy to defeat Him, preventing the souls of billions of people in His creation from reconciling with Him? Does a God Who so loves the world leave most of its human inhabitants permanently punished and condemned, eternally kept from His presence? Is God unable to cleanse them from their sins, unable to judge toward redemption, to change them throughout all eternity? Does man’s will ultimately and everlastingly triumph over God’s will?
When we believe, stand for, and share this message of reconciliation, we face the judgment and wrath of Christians who do not want their hell to be taken from them. This belief in eternal punishment for all who have not come to know Jesus Christ while on this earth is a dearly held doctrine, despite its recent creation around 200 years ago. What is this passionate commitment to a teaching that is generally accepted but was not a part of the foundation built by our Lord from the beginning?
Only God knows what is in hearts that would lead many to cling to a belief that condemns most of humanity. It’s puzzling for Christians to have such indifference, if not hatred, of unbelievers for whom Jesus died. What is the basis of the adherence to an eternal hell while rejecting ultimate reconciliation as heresy? Some may have mistakenly thought that ultimate reconciliation ends up permitting people to live a careless life, doing whatever they want. After all, everyone will be saved in the end anyway. What does it matter what we do now?
But wait. Humans need no permission to continue sinning! Godly men and women who truly understand this message would never represent God’s truth in a muddied and sinful way, seeing it as a free ticket for self-will. If a few foolish and egotistical men have done so, God will deal with them. And there are many more verses that absolutely do not support such an understanding. A holy and righteous life is the end result for all, but it is not given just by naming the name of Jesus Christ.
God does not save all despite their inner state, without knowledge or change. Of course, He will have all come to know Him and His ways, The truth of reconciliation for all is the most hopeful promise of restoration to God and is it ever needed! There is a process of purification to enter fully into reconciliation, this taking a great deal of time, here and on the other side, to achieve even within willing vessels.
We have been on a long and destructive path ever since disobedience in the Garden, but God always had a plan and a people called to fulfill our ultimate restoration to full intimacy with Him. Reconciliation is never permission to do our own will, as easily seen with a discerning examination of the scriptures. If fear of eternal hell is the most effective way for Christians to persuade others to believe in God, we’d surely have had a much bigger crop of purified believers than we do by now!
Do we want others to see Jesus in us? When they see Jesus in us, will they see the fiery condemnation of eternal damnation or the love of God able to save all? God loves everyone and desires all men to be saved. He said so. There is a time when every knee will bow and every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord, who then turns all back to the Father. All of God’s creation is set for His full redemption, reconciling us back to intimate fellowship with Him like Adam initially had with God.
God never excuses sin—missing the mark—but always, always shows the way of escape through Him for humans to change. Reapers in this hour specialize in sharing the love of God, speaking His truth and sharing His redemptive, restorative justice through ever purified lives. He will have a cleansed and purified people, with no spot or wrinkle, no guile in their hearts. You can start now to be clothed in Him or delay in unbelief until God calls up your rank in Him, but He will do it.
“You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everyone. You show that you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts.
Such confidence we have through Christ before God. Not that we are competent in ourselves to claim anything for ourselves, but our competence comes from God. He has made us competent as ministers of a new covenant—not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.” 2 Corinthians 3:1-6 NIV
We are the epistle known and read by others. The new covenant is one of love, bringing heart change to all who seek Him. Our godly life is the strongest witness there is. It is like the saying, “Preach a sermon and, if necessary, speak words,” commonly attributed to St. Francis of Assisi. How does the doctrine of the rapture that teaches an eternal , everlasting hell, give any Life? Hell is separation from God and we don’t have to die to experience that!
God’s people are His representatives on the earth. We are meant to shine forth with the nature of Christ in our hearts, not just call ourselves Christians. No godly message supports a life where sin is acceptable. God surely corrects anyone promoting an ungodly lifestyle based upon any doctrine, including reconciliation. Judgment comes first to the House of God, indeed! It may be common to man, but God does not accept it as our final state. He subjected us to vanity—it wasn’t our idea!
“For I am reckoning that the sufferings of the current era do not deserve the glory about to be revealed for us. For the premonition of the creation is awaiting the unveiling of the sons of God.
For to vanity was the creation subjected, not voluntarily, but because of Him Who subjects it, in expectation that the creation itself, also, shall be freed from the slavery of corruption into the glorious freedom of the children of God.” Romans 8:18-20 Concordant Literal
Vanity. Futility. Emptiness. Isn’t that the nature of the human condition when we look at all man has done to each other and to this earth? God Himself set this in motion and His plan takes care of it all in His time. Earth is our training ground, our temporary home where we learn to be like our God. This scripture, that our current suffering cannot be compared to the glory to be revealed in future, is sometimes the only answer God gives to those who have experienced the horrors of this life such as survivors of war and other atrocities.
It may not seem like much now, but God’s plans are eternal, while our vision is finite, limited to our earthly understanding—unless the holy spirit lifts us to spiritual comprehension of His ways. While God’s love is unconditional and His mercy everlasting, the rewards for a godly life are conditional. Gifts are free, but His best and most precious rewards are to the overcomers.
Love, joy, and peace found in His kingdom are eternal with overcomers ruling and reigning with Him. Those who walk His paths in righteousness now, following His precepts, are promised many things in this life as well as the next. Anyone who ministers the word of reconciliation, representing the truth that all men will be saved, is even more accountable for how they are living their lives.
Consider God’s ways with His own through the history of the church until now. All through His word, God takes His people through adversity, not out of it. The righteous went through the flood, protected and saved by Noah’s obedience and preparation. God did not allow this weapon of His destruction to harm His chosen, but He also did not remove His saints from the experience. The flood is the closest He has come to starting over with this creation of His.
The few scriptures that are quoted to support the rapture theory that are misunderstood and misrepresented reveal a lack of spiritual discernment. In the passage below, God uses clouds as a metaphor for His presence in His saints dwelling in spiritual Zion, His holy government.
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” Hebrews 12:1 NIV
We have many witnesses observing our growth in God. Most of us believe that God continues to use His saints on the other side, even seeing or sensing holy visitors in our midst. This happens at times when gathering unto God, other times when we are alone. The saints in heaven have an investment in what we are about here on this earth. They have yet to receive all that God has promised.
Those who have gone on to be with the Lord continue to change in the presence of God Almighty, each in their own rank. How could this fail to be so? Is there anyone who is able to be in God’s presence and not change? Will He not complete His perfecting work in all of us, on both sides of the river of Life, to fully restore, to reconcile His creation to Himself? In the great faith chapter, it says that all the great men and women of faith in the Old Testament are waiting to receive these promises:
“These were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what had been promised, since God had planned something better for us so that only together with us would they be made perfect.” Hebrews 11:39-40 NIV
God is never idle and, while we don’t know what all that the saints on the other side are up to, they surely are changing in His presence. They have shown forth a good report, yet wait to receive the fulfillment of God’s promise. While not looking forward to death of this body, many of us anticipate sitting down with the saints of old such as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Sarah, Rachel and Esther.
Abraham saw the City of God, this great spiritual city not made with hands. David envisioned the Day of the Lord and the coming of the Savior. Daniel saw the future plan of God unfold over time though he did not understand it. Paul pursued the prize of the high calling in God, knowing there was more that he could receive. John the Revelator spoke of repentance and change to overcome sin to the various churches. He spoke of current and future events to bring about the completion of the work of Jesus Christ in perfecting His saints:
“Now we know that if the earthly tent we live in is dismantled, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands.” 2 Corinthians 5:1 Berean
We know we have it even when our earthly tent, our bodies, are dismantled, disintegrated through death. We have an eternal, spiritual house in heaven prepared for us, in the spiritual Body of Jesus Christ. If all these departed saints are still waiting for the promises given them by God, they have yet to be fully perfected, complete in Him. Do we think these passionate leaders in God are sitting around with nothing to do?
They are surely at rest in God’s presence, fully delivered from death, but that does not mean a time of leisure, such as an earthly understanding of heaven would project. Who is interested in a mansion in the sky, with streets of gold, sitting around playing harps? To be with our Lord is the highest reward and those with a passionate heart of spiritual service to mankind would not consider this heavenly!
Many of us walking with God sense the presence of those who have gone before. Holy visitors join us on earth when we touch the high places in God, when we gather to hear or to minister the present truth of this Day. We are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses when our hearts touch the heavenly places wherein they dwell. Our departed brothers and sisters are very much invested in our progress here, eagerly noting our gains as we learn more of the deep things of God.
These holy saints are particularly connected when we speak of spiritual Zion, the coming of God’s righteous government to rule the earth, the fulfillment of the Feast of Tabernacles when God comes to tabernacle or dwell within His people. Clouds are the spiritual metaphor the Lord uses to describe people, here and in the spirit. Zion saints on the other side draw near, as part of the great cloud of witnesses of which Paul speaks.
Other passages use the spiritual language of clouds to represent people in the spirit. The disciples saw Jesus ascend “into the clouds,” Jude speaks of false prophets and teachers of his time as “clouds without rain.” Rain has long been understood to represent the water of the Word. To be without rain is saying God’s spirit is not in them or their works. Anyone witnessing a long-lasting drought can visualize the dry crusty earth, a desert where no plant can grow, that transforms to produce vegetation from dormant seed when rain comes.
“These men are hidden reefs [elements of great danger to others] in your love feasts when they feast together with you without fear, looking after [only] themselves; [they are like] clouds without water, swept along by the winds; autumn trees without fruit, doubly dead, uprooted and lifeless.” Jude 12 Amplified
All seeds need rain to grow and bear fruit. His seed is in every human because He is the giver of life. Some seeds are hidden in human beings with no visible growth, dormant until God brings the rain of His presence to water their earth. Then His seed can grow roots and spring up into new life. The people in these dry clouds are living in a dry, dry place where there is no spiritual rain. God Himself withholds the rain until it is time.
Spiritually, clouds without rain have no refreshing flow of the spirit within or through them to water the dry ground. The planting of any seed, including the seed of the Word of Life, cannot take root in hard, dry, dusty ground. Throw a seed on very dry ground and it will just lay there, awaiting water to develop roots in order to grow. God has provided many examples of His works by the metaphoric words He uses from the natural world He created.
Seeds found in ancient tombs still germinate—think of it! Consider also the few plants known in the earth that sustain seeds holding the germ of life forever while waiting for the rain. One is Moringa, called the “never die” plant. It survives with little rain for many years, tumbling around until finally landing in a little water that causes it to germinate and come to life. There is also a plant called the eternity plant, or ZZ plant, that never dies. As long as there is a seed within, growth is possible, regardless of outward appearance!
There are streams in the desert, growth that springs into life when His rain comes.
“Behold, I am about to do something new; even now it is coming. Do you not see it? Indeed, I will make a way in the wilderness and streams in the desert. The beasts of the field will honor Me, the jackals and the ostriches, because I provide water in the wilderness and rivers in the desert, to give drink to My chosen people.” Isaiah 43: 19-20 Berean
When we understand spiritual language, we will no longer allow the imaginations of men to project our life in heaven as a literal cloud with a mansion and nothing to do. Yet we have many beautiful gospel songs, beloved by so many Christians, that have spread this error far and wide. I’ll Fly Away, written in 1929 by Albert E. Brumley, is the best-known rapture song depicting this view of our heavenly home. It’s a beautiful song, sung and performed by musicians of all genres, but the words are not truth.
There are many other songs depicting heavenly mansions on literal streets of gold, visions of saints sitting on actual clouds, playing their harps, and looking down upon with satisfaction at others who have not escaped destruction as they have. But this is God’s spiritual language, like the parables Jesus shared with the crowds. God is spirit and we must understand His words by spirit.
When the time comes in His plan, the seeds of God’s word start to grow. He speaks the word and life springs up at His command. Dry thirsty land is the spiritual condition of many, but here is God’s promise:
“For I will pour water on the thirsty land, and currents on the dry ground. I will pour out My Spirit on your descendants, and My blessing on your offspring.” Isaiah 44:3 Berean
God’s rain comes and goes and we enjoy the refreshings, but such times don’t last. Elders in the Lord who lived through the Latter Rain movement describe a continual holy presence of God lasting for days. The Shekinah glory descended and stayed with them. They were swallowed up in worship and praise, losing interest in earthly activities. Such times are holy, precious outpouring of God’s spirit that gradually fade as they are taken over by man.
Like all other wondrous moves of God, what began as pure Godlife poured out on a people dries up in the desert of man’s fleshly ways. Man’s imaginations, rather than God’s revelation, has always brought every move of God down to our fleshly, earthly understandings. We need reconciliation, restoration, a lasting change, the new thing that God is doing. No longer will we settle for times of refreshing, for revival that doesn’t last. We seek His eternal wisdom and truth dwelling, lasting within us, rather than a short time of refreshment, pleasant as it is.
Interesting, isn’t it, that the commonly accepted description of heaven reflects what the wealthy have on earth. What does this reveal about our hearts that our projection of heaven, the best place ever to dwell, is an earthly, rather than spiritual, representation? The visual description of streets of gold and mansions in the sky sounds like the luxurious dwellings of the idle rich. These projections represent the outward show, an evidence of richness and wealth where God’s chosen are at ease, but reflect little of the qualities found in the heart of God.
What is true riches in God? God does not think the way we do and He surely does not measure spiritual progress by earthly standards of wealth. In fact, He said it would be hard for rich men to enter. Did we begin in the spirit and end up in the flesh somewhere? Who would be more used to dwelling in a mansion than those who can afford such housing?! When believers have a heart for God, we hope for much more important things than a mansion that resembles earthly ambition and worldly blessings.
It is not by outward, but true inward heart change that the Kingdom is achieved as our dwelling place. After all the work God has done to refine and perfect His people, do we really believe He will allow us to just sit around? There is a rest that remains for the people of God, but God’s rest does not mean inactivity except of our fleshly ways. God rested on the seventh day from all He had done.
We are now on the seventh Day, looking to enter into His rest. No longer will His word and His will be labor for those who roar out of Zion.
“I consider that our present sufferings are not comparable to the glory that will be revealed in us. The [whole] creation waits in eager expectation for the revelation of the sons of God. Romans 8:18 Berean
It’s what is in us, in our hearts, that is growing from the seed God has planted through Jesus Christ within. The traditional teaching of the rapture and eternal hell have caused confusion and fear in God’s people, but when a Christian truly examines God’s word in the light of His spirit, there is very little evidence of its truth. Most who embrace it were handed down this teaching through tradition and leadership rather than their own revelatory understanding.
Those who continue to vigorously defend this teaching typically have a strong investment in influencing followers to sustain it, along with the power, esteem, and revenue it produces, rather than seeking spiritual understanding. Some leaders privately admit that they know the teaching of reconciliation of all is truth, but say they cannot teach it because they would lose their following, position, influence, income, and denominational favor, choosing these over the Lord’s truth.
When we desire to know the truth from personal exploration by the spirit, God is always faithful to show us what is truth and what is a theory from carnal man. Teachings based on fear, rather than love that casts out all fear, do not show forth the kingdom of God. Fear-based teaching may work temporarily to change behavior but only God changes us deep in our beings in lasting ways. His love has no limit, His grace has no measure.
“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.” 2 Timothy 1:7 KJV
He doesn’t want us to do what is right because we are afraid of Him or of future vengeful punishment, but because we love Him. Any wise earthly father prefers their child to do what he says because they love and want to please him, rather than out of fear of consequences. That’s external motivation and it lasts only as long as the external motivator, the parent, is around. Unless obedience is built up within the heart of the child, that same child will require other external motivators to behave and faces a difficult future.
Yes, it is so good to run to Father God in fearful times! We need to know it is safe to do that. But fear-based obedience is people-directed, not in-worked by God. Threats of eternal hell have not created the deep, lasting conversion arising from a changed heart. Many more people attended church after the 9/11 terrorist attack on our country, a truly terrifying time for those in the US, but how many sustained their walk with Him based on love and faith?
God does not want us to have fear but faith, because the fearful cannot enter in:
“Then the angel showed me a river of the water of life, clear as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb (Christ), in the middle of its street. On either side of the river was the tree of life, bearing twelve kinds of fruit, yielding its fruit every month; and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.
There will no longer exist anything that is cursed [because sin and illness and death are gone], and the throne of God and the Lamb will be in it, and His bond-servants will serve and worship Him [with great awe and joy and loving devotion];
They will [be privileged to] see His face, and His name will be on their foreheads. And there will no longer be night; they do not need lamplight or sunlight, because the Lord God will illumine them, and they will reign [as kings] forever and ever.” Revelation 22:1-5 Amplified
The Concordant translates no more curse as no more doom. We know there is no sin, illness and death after our physical bodies die so this is clearly our promised future on this earth, our promised new earth here, where we need it. There is already no doom on the other side. This is heaven right here: no more condemnation, no doom, no death, no tears, no more night! It is the state of being God is drawing us into as we walk and overcome with Him. It is His coming again within the saints!
Distorted teaching about the book of Revelation is part of the rapture doctrine where revelatory words and events are applied randomly, understood to be directed at unbelievers rather than what John clearly states. Revelation is often taught as the judgment of God coming on the world of earthly sinners.but the Book of Revelation given to John the Revelator is a most important Message our Lord is bringing to His slaves, His own people.
John was in the spirit when He got this revelation. It is in symbolic language meant to be understood by the spirit.
“The Unveiling of Jesus Christ, which God gives to Him, to show to His slaves what must occur swiftly; and He signifies it, dispatching through His messenger to His slave John, who testifies to the word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ, whatever He perceived.” Revelation 1:1-2 Concordant Literal
All through the Bible, God speaks His most important words to His own in order to teach us how to live. He does not end His book any differently. He wants His people to know what is coming and what they need to do to be ready. Revelation begins with messages to the early, scattered “candlestick churches”. These churches were established by the disciples of Christ, lit by the spirit of the Lord. In the revelation, the Lord speaks to the spiritual condition of each, what is good, lasting, and eternal, and what needs to change to move on in His plan of redemption for all.
This is symbolic of spiritual conditions that must be overcome. In Revelation’s final message of warning to these churches, the Laodicean church is depicted with Jesus Christ standing outside the door and knocking. How sad that so many of today’s churches of this day operate without the Lord’s presence leading by the spirit. He is no longer present in its patterns and rituals, its worship and ministry. Instead, He is standing outside the door, knocking to be admitted again.
There have been so much of man’s ways embedded in the order of the service, schedule of speakers and singers, and so on, that the presence of our Lord and His holy spirit has left. There’s little room for God in these entertaining programs, regardless of the talent and skill of their leadership leading the way. Sadly, there is little recognition between beautifully and skillfully delivered worship and word and the anointing of the spirit. But it is the anointing that causes the oppressor to flee:
“And it shall come to pass in that day, that his burden shall be taken away from off thy shoulder, and his yoke from off thy neck, and the yoke shall be destroyed because of the anointing.” Isaiah 10:27 KJV
We who love the Lord and are called according to His purpose for this hour follow on to know Him. We leave the Laodicean condition of thinking we’re rich and have need of nothing. We know we need more of God! We do not settle in that camp or any other, but come up here, as the Lord directed John, up into the spiritual realm where He is.
“After these things I looked, and behold, a door standing open in heaven. And the first voice which I heard was like a trumpet speaking with me, saying, ‘Come up here, and I will show you things which must take place after this.’” Revelation 4:1 NKJV
We are growing up into Him now, not waiting for a future rapture to take us away from all our problems. The cost of clinging to such unexamined, dead teaching is to miss out on much character growth in Him now. This is referenced in Hebrews 11, the great faith chapter, as the goal of a better resurrection, following an account of all the saints of old endured
“Women received back their dead, raised to life again. There were others who were tortured, refusing to be released so that they might gain an even better resurrection.” Hebrews 11:35 NIV
If there’s a better resurrection available, with the key seeming to be enduring and overcoming affliction and suffering, there is also a resurrection that falls short for some. When we are just waiting for the rapture, this doctrine becomes a robber and a thief! There are Christians who have stopped growing, resting in their current condition while waiting to be taken away when the rapture happens. They are satisfied with what they know and the religious things they have always done.
Some of our brothers and sisters in Christ have thus slowed down or stopped learning and growing in necessary, spiritual ways to advance in the Lord. When we believe some things can only change once we are dead, that only the death of our bodies can accomplish this, we settle for where we are. We build our tent of dwelling in this camp and miss His further intent to perfect us, to be complete in Him.
Be Ye Perfect
But hear this: the kingdom of God has been and is coming in us. Jesus stated this very clearly in the gospels. If God says we will be perfect, complete, we will be, on this side of heaven or the other. He promised we would be perfect, never stating we must physically die to have God work His perfection in us:
“You, therefore, will be perfect [growing into spiritual maturity both in mind and character, actively integrating godly values into your daily life], as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Matthew 5:48 Amplified
Matthew does not say here that we will be perfect or complete after we die. He just states that you are to be perfect! God tells us we are to be perfect, complete in Him and if He said it, He will do it. We are to be like Him with the mind of Christ in us and His character written in our hearts. Because we have yet to see the fullness in someone on this earth does not make it any less so. Is there any work God has begun, ever, that He does not finish?
God does not tell His people to do something that He does not make a way for us to do. The message of ultimate reconciliation provides so much hope for us now, rather than expecting everything to be done in the afterlife. He made the way for this to be. There is only one place where we can be made perfect. That is when we come up spiritually to the place where Jesus Christ is, His throne in spiritual Zion with Father God. Here is where just men are being perfected.
We leave all other camps, all other realms of Christianity in which some have settled, to answer His call to come up higher in the spirit where He rules and reigns.
“Instead, you have come to Mount Zion, to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem. You have come to myriads of angels in joyful assembly, to the congregation of the firstborn, enrolled in heaven.
You have come to God the Judge of all, to the spirits of the righteous, made perfect, to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.” Hebrews 12:22-24 Berean
You have come, not will come! Though we know only One perfect being, our Lord Jesus Christ, the perfection of Jesus Christ has come to dwell in us, to perfect us to be as He is. He promised. God is within us, enlarging His habitation inside of us, wherein is His kingdom. He will continue to lift us out of death and hell, making us, His body, a fit habitation for Jesus and His Father to dwell, tabernacling in us.
Jesus Christ our Lord is the firstborn of many brethren. We who remain on earth but live in spirit have the opportunity to be made a part of this first fruit company of the sons of God.
“So then, my dear ones, just as you have always obeyed [my instructions with enthusiasm], not only in my presence but now much more in my absence, continue to work out your salvation [that is, cultivate it, bring it to full effect, actively pursue spiritual maturity] with awe-inspired fear and trembling [using serious caution and critical self-evaluation to avoid anything that might offend God or discredit the name of Christ].
For it is [not your strength, but it is] God who is effectively at work in you, both to will and to work [that is, strengthening, energizing, and creating in you the longing and the ability to fulfill your purpose] for His good pleasure.” Philippians 2:12-13 Amplified
We are directed by Paul to take our salvation seriously, to be in awe of our Savior and His work within us. What God decrees, He completes in us. We are His workmanship. How well we know that we cannot do anything God directs us to do in our own strength! He even creates the will in us when we do not have it! We enter into His rest while He works in us a willingness as well as the fruit of the character of Christ that pleases Him. That, brothers and sisters in Christ, is good news!
To be thrown into the lake of fire does bring death, but it’s death to self, a lifelong process that continues in the afterlife. Have you heard the phrase, “That just burned within me!” from someone who has received God’s message of correction in their heart? That’s His fire, His presence sent to purify us. Eventually hell is thrown into the lake of fire, after all on earth and in heaven, including the great sea of unbelievers are each judged toward redemption.
This lake of fire cannot be the same thing as hell if hell ends up there, too. When all God’s purpose for satan is done, he is also changed. There is no more flesh, no more earth for satan to work within.
“Then I saw a great white throne and the One seated on it. Earth and heaven fled from His presence, and no place was found for them. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne.
And there were open books, and one of them was the Book of Life. And the dead were judged according to their deeds, as recorded in the books. The sea gave up its dead, and Death and Hades [hell] gave up their dead, and each one was judged according to his deeds.
Then Death and Hades [Hell] were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death—the lake of fire. And if anyone was found whose name was not written in the Book of Life, he was thrown into the lake of fire.” Revelation 20:11-15 Berean
We are to be perfect—complete—as He is perfect. We are to be judged in order to come into His perfection. He perfects us through adversity, His fiery presence burning up our dross. It is difficult to believe God meant for us to wait for this project to begin when we are talking perfection that could take an eternity! It’s wise to get started as soon as we can, to be found clothed with Him rather than being found naked. We believe and seek Him for any command or promise He has given, just like Paul pursued the prize of the high calling while walking this earth.
Because we have yet to see a human fully perfected in God does not dismiss this truth. In fact, God may have had a few who got close to this, we just don’t know about them! God said it, so we can do it! But when? There still is this matter of timing. Many have longed to be perfected, to look into this Day of the Lord, but have been prevented because it has not been God’s timing. But there are now signs that this Day is dawning, this long awaited Day of the Lord.
Jesus has been coming back within a people to be unveiled, seen as He really is shining out , from within us into this dark, dark world. He is not seen as a God too weak and powerless to save all of the world He so loved. Jesus Christ is by no means still battling satan whom He defeated on the cross. He is battling and conquering the antichrist, anything that is anti—against—Christ within us:
“And I looked, and behold, a white horse! And its rider had a bow, and a crown was given to him, and he came out conquering, and to conquer.” Revelation 6:2 ESV
Has He not been coming in, conquering our fleshly ways, the sin that misses the mark He has set for us, since we invited Him in our hearts? For too long we Christians have put the anti-Christ off on others, saying it is this or that powerful dictator or leader in our present-day world. No, it’s this denomination or that. Wait, it is this minister or that who is teaching error.
It is time to look in the mirror and recognize that the anti-Christ is within us, well established in our all-to-human natures. This anti-Christ to be defeated dwells in all flesh that resists God and His spiritual reign. All flesh, all carnality, our very human carnal mind, is against Christ. John said there were already many antichrists in the world back in his day:
“Children, it is the last hour; and just as you have heard that the antichrist is coming, so now many antichrists have appeared. This is how we know it is the last hour.
They went out from us, but they did not belong to us. For if they had belonged to us, they would have remained with us. But their departure made it clear that none of them belonged to us.” 1 John 2:8 NKJV
Those who left them were antichrists, ones in their midst who had too much anti or against Christ within them to be swallowed up in life. They went off to do their own thing, seeking their own power and esteem through taking over the message and people of God. This was already in the early Christian church as the Apostle Paul spoke of it in his writings. We too need to see all that is antichrist within us, trusting our Lord to conquer and be conquering everything as we walk with Him.
Jesus said that the Kingdom does not come with scrutiny, with visible observation to those looking for it out there somewhere. How then could the antichrist be one evil person in the world? We can look and look at the world for the antichrist and many have. People, denominations, and even nations are said to be the coming antichrist, past, present and future.
But Jesus went on to state that the kingdom of God is in us, so think about it. Isn’t that where the forces against His kingdom operate as well? Amazing, isn’t it? With spiritual eyes open to see and spiritual ears ready to hear, we see that the antichrist dwells within the fleshly souls of humans. We have those things within us that are against Christ, keeping His full authority from ruling over us as He comes to dwell within His temple, which we are.
God takes off the covering, our refuge of lies. Once exposed, in faith and trust we yield all to God and turn away from anything that is working against Christ being formed in us. Our human, fleshly nature, including our own most deceitful mind, mustbe swa llowed up in life because flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God.
“Just as we have borne the image of the earthly [the man of dust], we will also bear the image of the heavenly [the Man of heaven]. Now I say this, believers, that flesh and blood cannot inherit nor be part of the kingdom of God; nor does the perishable (mortal) inherit the imperishable (immortal).” 1 Corinthians 15:49-50 Amplified
The only thing that is imperishable is the spirit of God. Our spiritual bodies will indeed live forever in His sight. Thankfully God does not wait until we die to work these changes in us. His word, His direction, His path throughout to become more and more like Him is available now, in this life. The spiritual body within us is being transformed to see, hear, touch, taste and smell through His holy senses.
He gives us eyes to see, ears to hear as we taste and see that the Lord is good. We become a sweet smelling savor unto the Lord. Things are rapidly changing and all that can be shaken is being shaken by ever more dramatic events occurring on earth. Why would we refuse to grow up into Christ as far as we can while in this life? It takes faith and endurance until He accomplishes all that He intends to do with humans.
God’s will for all men to be saved surely will happen but some may not know His full salvation and redemption for ages to come. Let’s allow our Lord to decide just how far each of His people can go in their calling and election in Him while here on the earth. Does He not need His people to shine a light in this present darkness here and now? We are surely in much darkness on this earth, in great need of God’s light to shine through His people.
We pursue the prize of the High calling just like Paul, so we may be clothed, rather than naked, at His appearance. Are we not given all things because of what He has done? What truly is in the hearts of those who cling to the rapture doctrine proclaiming all non-believers will burn in a literal hellfire and brimstone furnace if they are not saved in this life?
May God draw His own into all truth, as promised in the holy spirit. What matters most is what the spirit of truth teaches each of us as we sit before the Lord to learn of Him. If you struggle with this truth of all men being saved and reconciled to God, I encourage you to ask the Lord, sincerely, if these things be true. Allow your heavenly Father to speak truth to you and you will know His ways, not just His acts. It is His work to bring us into all truth, spirit to spirit:
“But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come.” John 16:13 NIV
Joy
Here we're exploring the biblical concepts of joy and strength found in God's presence, as illustrated through passages from Nehemiah and John. The blog emphasizes the distinction between temporary happiness and the enduring joy of the Lord, which remains a source of strength and resilience through life's challenges, and is a key aspect of spiritual growth and fulfillment.
“Nehemiah the governor, Ezra the priest and scribe, and the Levites who were instructing the people said to all of them, ‘This day is holy to the LORD your God. Do not mourn or weep.’ For all the people were weeping as they heard the words of the Law.
Then Nehemiah told them, ‘Go and eat what is rich, drink what is sweet, and send out portions to those who have nothing prepared, since today is holy to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.” Nehemiah 8: 9-10 Berean
The Israelites had just completed the rebuilding of Jerusalem, God’s holy city that had been destroyed by their enemies. Their leader, Nehemiah, along with Ezra and the Levitical priests, were reading the Book of Moses to the people. They had so longed to hear the words of the Law of Moses that they asked that it be read to them by their leaders. Then the people began weeping as they listened and understood.
But this was a time of restoration, of celebration, so Nehemiah told them to go and feast. It was a Holy Day and there was no need to grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.
“As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you: continue ye in my love. If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father's commandments, and abide in his love.
These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full.” John 15:9-12 KJV
What makes joy more likely to remain in us, filling us up with His joy? Why, it is love! When we love the Lord, there is no limit to the joy we know in loving Him, abiding in His love, and loving others! It’s not just a great feeling to be joyful, it’s the source of every Christian’s strength. He is our joy, ever-present within us.
Ever have times when you are battered and beaten down in this life, feeling little strength to get up and go at it the next day? Those are likely times when we’ve lost connection with His joy, ever-present but not always felt within. But nothing gets us out of our own times of struggle more quickly than when God turns our focus. God knows how to refresh us, revealing Himself anew to us and renewing our joy.
His joy is not like our joy in having great experiences in our lives. It’s not the momentary flood of happiness at a special event or time of celebration. It is an enduring part of God’s nature, available as part of the Kingdom within. Joy is always there, whether we feel it or lose sight of it. True riches are found in love, not just enjoyable circumstances. God is love and His love is rich with all of the fruit of the spirit, including joy.
There are 430 times when joy is mentioned in the Bible, far more than happiness is mentioned. This supports the distinction between the joy of the Lord and our earthly feelings of happiness. Happiness is that momentary, wonderful feeling that comes from external events, including a wonderful time worshiping and communing with the Lord. Joy is the ever-present substance of God’s nature, always bubbling like a well within, ready to overflow:
“For His anger is but for a moment, and His favor is for a lifetime. Weeping may tarry for the night, but joy comes with the morning.” Psalm 30:5 Berean
David wrote Psalm 30 when he sought the Lord for deliverance from his enemies and healing from his afflictions. We go through our dark times, weeping in the night when the light of His countenance seems far from us. The truth of David’s statement about God only having momentary anger sharply contrasts with the teaching that an angry, vengeful God will eternally punish unbelievers, banishing them all to hell forever. Jesus took our chastisements upon Him, so why would God still need to?
Eternal punishment and separation from God is not momentary anger. The teaching of an angry, vengeful God Who will inflict harsh punishment takes no account that His mercy endureth forever. Yes, His righteous judgment is sure but always redemptive, limited for a season, a time, an age, or through a spiritual dispensation in order to accomplish His refining work.
God is love and mercy. His nature is not to remain angry with those He loves and He loves the world. It’s just for a moment when it seems as if He has turned His back on us. God directs His discipline to deliver us from our enemies within, to bring us into the joyful light of His morning. His wrath is His passion for having a people in which to fully dwell. When Jesus was facing the suffering, pain, and shame of the cross, He predicted joy to His disciples.
How odd this must have sounded in such desperate times! He knew how they would suffer watching His arrest, whipping, derision and shame. Such deep suffering and death they witnessed but hallellujah, joy comes in the morning! Can we even imagine the joy of resurrection morning, when Mary Magdalene found the tomb empty and He then appeared?
“So also you have sorrow now, but I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you.” John 16:22
Jesus told them that no one could ever take their joy from them after they saw Him again in His resurrection. He is our joy and no one can take Him from us. We have times of sorrow and weeping, enduring through the dark nights of our soul, when darkness seems to swallow us up. But joy does come in the dawning of the new Day. He promises that joy within, coming from His abiding place in our hearts, will not be taken from us.
When we can’t find the joy and our strength is waning, we have just momentarily, through times of adversity and pain, lost sight of it. We become weary in well-doing. But joy cannot be taken from us because He can never be taken from within us, in our hearts. Once invited in, Jesus Christ does not leave. Happiness is circumstantial, more fleeting than we would wish. It leaves as the many sorrows of this earth overtake us. But joy, His joy, is everlasting. Jesus’ joy at fulfilling His calling is certain:
“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off every encumbrance and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with endurance the race set out for us.
Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” Hebrews 12:1-2 Berean
Yes, Jesus Christ endured the cross but scorned or despised the shame. In other words, He did not focus on the suffering or the shame of dying on the cross just like the worst criminals of His day. He set His heart on the joy of returning to His place with the Father, those He would bring to Father God and to humanity by fulfilling what His Father had called Him to do. His victory gave Him enduring joy, forever available to us no matter what we are facing.
We can endure present suffering and affliction, knowing our times of participation in His suffering eventually bring joy in God’s processing and plan for all. His joy is in us, with the fullness of His joy developing over time. When we see pictures of present-day saints who have endured great suffering and grief, there is noticeable joy in their eyes, a twinkle of the rejoicing of His ever-present, most faithful spirit within.
For these saints, the years of affliction and sorrow do not rob them of His joy. His joy has filled these Christians up inside so that it shines forth from their countenance, overflowing in love for God and others. They know the presence of His joy, having passed through many tests and trials where they learn of His faithfulness. They clung to the words Jesus spoke. They are spirit and they are life!
We don’t have to rely on His fleshly presence as in the days He was on this earth. Because He lives inside of us, building His kingdom of righteousness, He is ever-present. The kingdom of God is within us, and He brought it! We, like David, can always go to Him. David had many dark times, regardless of the eternal promises given to him by God. We see in the Psalms how he took his troubles to the Lord and celebrated in His presence:
“You make known to me the path of life; in your presence, there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” Psalms 16:11 ESV
It’s a powerful prayer to ask God to show us the path of life He has for us. This is not merely a nice turn of phrase, it is a specific promise that He will show us how to live. There is His path for our lives, outlined in the scriptures and more specifically understood by His spirit. Therein lies the joy of walking in obedient surrender. God desires His people to be joyful, to enjoy the allotment of His Kingdom He has provided.
Rather than trying to work joy up, His presence continually fills up His joy within us. There is a particular path for each of us that God knows. He is revealing it, appearing within to tell us how to walk, where to go, and what to do. As we draw near to him, particularly in times of adversity, His presence to guide, direct, and reassure us is there, along with His joy. The most joyful place to walk is in the center of His will. Challenges? Yes. Afflictions? Yes. But:
“Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivers him out of them all.” Psalm 34:19-20 NKJV
God is the only way to experience eternal, everlasting joy! His presence is love and that is the fullness of joy. Many martyrs died a torturous death with joy in the Lord in their hearts. When our roots go down deep into Him, the fruit of the spirit grows naturally, being attached to the Vine. Joy is named by Paul as one of the top three fruits of the spirit in the great love chapter of 1 Corinthians 13. We can seek and obtain all we want of His nature to bear all of His fruit, the signs of living in Him.
“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.” Galatians 5:22-23 ESV
Paul states there is no law against these qualities, no boundary or limit. Our heavenly Father loves us. Like any father, He enjoys us being joyful. What makes a parent more joyful, themselves, than when their dearly loved and precious children show forth joy? Is there anything more joyful than hearing babies giggle in delight or children laughing as they play? They are showing the sheer joy in being alive!
Wise parents teach their children that true joy comes from those things that are unseen, the godly qualities within, not from possessions or entertainment or experiences. Indeed, we are commanded to be joyful:
“Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, O righteous, and shout for joy, all you upright in heart!” Psalms 32:11 Berean
His joy is literally our strength. Without it, we are weak and become despondent, particularly in our trials. We cannot fake it or work hard to have it. We need faith to trust that because He is within us, His joy is always there and will return as we endure, when our morning comes. He promises to bring our awareness to it again, to bubble up within as we come out of our dark times—and occasionally, right in the midst of darkness!
The Lord does not say we cannot have joy while there is so much darkness and suffering in the world. Who is more aware of all that than our heavenly Father? We have joy because He knows the end from the beginning, because He is promising that, like David, we will emerge from the night into the bright dawning of a new day, into the joy of His presence. Joy comes in the morning, when light—enlightenment—dawns upon us!
We humans are prone to work at being happy. We go from thing to thing, experience to experience, relationship to relationship, possession to possession, success to success, in search of happiness. Happiness is a good thing, but what we learn is that it is only fleeting. When growing up with lack and scarcity, some mistakenly think in their hearts, “When I have enough (money, possessions, security, adventures, friends, love, etc), then I will be happy.”
As we mature in the Lord, we learn that this kind of happiness leads some to seek more and more in this life, an endless search for fulfillment with no lasting contentment. That’s not what He promises. Here is what He promises:
“But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you.” Matthew 6:33 Berean
Joy is not something we need to work at and try hard to develop. Does fruit have to groan and strain to grow on an fruit tree? It grows and matures naturally as long as it is connected to the tree, receiving rain and sun along the way. As we focus on Him, the fruit of His spiritual character grows within us. Our spiritual Vine has all we need for spiritual maturity.
“Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, or set foot on the path of sinners, or sit in the seat of mockers. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord, and on His law he meditates day and night.
He is like a tree planted by streams of water, yielding its fruit in season, whose leaf does not wither, and who prospers in all he does.” Psalms 1:1-3 Berean
A tree just grows, because that is what it is created to do. As we delight in His word, His way is shown to us daily. Do you want to prosper in all that you do? Here are the spiritual keys to that. God’s people are not to walk in worldly counsel, follow the path of life that sinners take, nor be a part of the mockers around us. We learn to delight in His law, enjoying His word more than anything else.
There is a continual hunger for spiritual things and an appreciation that God builds within us that surely does not come easily to the fleshly man! Humans have a natural spiritual hunger, often unrecognized as their longing for God. Look all around and you will observe humans feeding our God-hunger with many other things that are temporal and unsatisfying. Of course, only God can satisfy God-hunger, that deep longing within for the love, intimacy and comfort with our Saviour and our heavenly Father.
To find it, the focus of our hearts is to be on the kingdom of God, which is love, peace, and joy. We set our hearts on His Kingdom, seeking His righteousness, the right way He does things, and His path of life for us, first. Then anything we truly need will be added—and more! We are that tree planted, rooted and grounded in Him, by His streams of spiritual water.
This yields the fruit of His spirit in every season. No withering leaves for the Tree of Life! Everlasting joy is within, giving us the strength to endure the hard times along the way:
“So the redeemed of the Lord will return and enter Zion with singing, crowned with everlasting joy. Gladness and joy will overtake them, and sorrow and sighing will flee.” Isaiah 35: 10 Berean
In this Day of the Lord surely upon us, we are returning to spiritual Zion, where dwell the saints made perfected on the other side.
“But, ye came to Mount Zion, and to a city of the living God, to the heavenly Jerusalem, and to myriads of messengers, to the company and assembly of the first-born in heaven enrolled, and to God the judge of all, and to spirits of righteous men made perfect,” Hebrews 12:22-23 YLT
These holy saints are waiting for us to join them in coming victories on the earth at His appearing, when he descends with a shout! The fullness of His joy is a promise to be fulfilled in this time. Truly, truly His kingdom is coming to the earth, established in His redeemed saints. The time for the fullness of His joy is now!
Entering Into Our Rest
In this blog, we talk about the balance between self-care and service in Christianity, emphasizing that caring for oneself is not selfish but necessary for effective ministry. The blog underscores the importance of receiving as well as giving, and highlights the need for Christians to practice self-compassion and seek God's guidance in balancing life's demands.
We are His workmanship and He is teaching us about resting in Him. Some of us can tell you the needs of everyone around us but draw a blank when asked what we need. We become so busy helping and serving others, addressing their needs and giving to others, that we neglect to receive for ourselves. Giving and receiving is best in balance over time.
But for some busy and burdened Christians, what they, themselves, need is a brand new question to consider. What is it we need?Some Christians feel selfish every time they do something for themselves. But feeling selfish does not mean that we are actually being selfish. Feelings are not facts. We can learn to love ourselves as we love others as the Lord called second great commandment.
There is a balance that God is able to bring in our care of others and care of self. It is not selfish to take care of ourselves and our own needs. In our busy lives, to have time to literally rest, to refresh and to renew is critical. Jesus did this, particularly after significant times of ministering to the multitudes. We are to give freely, but we also can learn the receiving part when our giving is out of balance.
“As you go, preach this message: ‘The kingdom of heaven is near.’ Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, drive out demons. Freely you have received; freely give.” Matthew 10:7-8 Berean
It pleases the Lord when we give freely, without expectation of reward from others. But if we begin to question and become upset because others don’t seem to give back the way we have given to them, we’re focused on what we’re not getting in return, rather than motivated by pleasing the Lord. This heart condition leads to resentment. We always receive from God Who blesses and ever rewards us for all we do in His name. His nature of love makes no demands.
We must give ourselves the same grace and love that God gives us and we are to display towards others. We are to be loving others as we love ourselves. Yet, human beings can be very harsh on themselves, with a severe inner critic that is not God’s voice within. We talk to ourselves in ways we would not dream of doing with others! All the fruit of the spirit is good for ourselves as well as others.
God knows everything that is required of us. He is able to prioritize what we need to do each day. He also teaches us what we need to stop doing because there’s no benefit–it’s not expedient for us to do those things. His word does this work within us:
“For the word of God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it pierces even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow. It judges the thoughts and intentions of the heart.
Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight; everything is uncovered and exposed before the eyes of Him to whom we must give account.” Hebrews 4:12-13 Berean
God does this paring down, this refining work we need within each heart that determines to serve Him, in order to enter into His rest. Here’s the thing: God loves us. He is most fond of us. He made us for relationship, for companionship. Our heavenly Father wants us to enjoy the life He’s given us. We are to enjoy our allotment in His kingdom as He conquers all things within us.
Does it show forth the glory of God when we are all bent down with burdens, miserable in our walk with Him? Or when we are going along well, only to run into another believer who is burdened down and heavy laden, and we take it all on? It’s not good if, when we part, others are much lighter but we are now burdened down and heavy laden! We are to assist others with their issues in response to the guidance of the spirit, without being caught in a snare ourselves.
This is not just vulnerability to the same issues, it also is vulnerability to take on and continue with the other’s burdens that we should be taking to the Lord. There’s a great release when God opens our eyes to show how we are taking on burdens that do not belong to us! Some burdens cannot be ours even though these are great needs in the world around us. Recently, I was burdened about a world issue, and the Lord simply said, “You do not need to worry about that!”
If it is God’s burden, laid upon our hearts by the holy spirit, we can trust God to guide and direct us without taking matters unto ourselves. Many of God’s burdens, particularly for intercessors, are only for a season, a period of time, as led by the holy spirit. God shows when either the need of the other is met or we are released from interceding on their behalf. We can take others’ burdens to the Lord and learn to leave them there. Let them go through our hearts and on into His heart.
To mature in our walk with the Lord, we all must ultimately face dealing with Him ourselves. It is our responsibility, not another’s. We do not want to get in the way of God’s dealings with another growing believer. We walk alongside others, interceding for their needs, allowing the Lord to teach us how to keep the burden in the Lord’s hands, not on ourselves. Others’ needs then go through us to the Christ within.
One of my favorite songs is the Catholic hymn, The Servant Song, taken from Jesus’ words in Matthew (above). Originally the first line was “Brother, let me be your servant,” sometimes alternated with “Sister, let me be your servant.” Either way, these lyrics eloquently summarize the balance needed as we walk with each other in the Lord:
The Servant Song
Will you let me be your servant, let me be as Christ to you;
Pray that I may have the grace to let you be my servant, too.
We are pilgrims on a journey, we are trav'lers on the road;
We are here to help each other walk the mile and bear the load.
I will hold the Christ-light for you in the night-time of your fear;
I will hold my hand out to you, speak the peace you long to hear.
I will weep when you are weeping; when you laugh I'll laugh with you.
I will share your joy and sorrow ‘til we've seen this journey through.
When we sing to God in heaven we shall find such harmony,
Born of all we've known together of Christ's love and agony.
Will you let me be your servant, let me be as Christ to you
Pray that I may have the grace to let you be my servant too.
(Richard Gillard, 1977)
Do you hear the balance, see the mutual exchange here? When God deals with us about our balance of giving and receiving, He includes all of the good things provided for our enjoyment. Multitudes of scriptures encourage us to be joyful, providing keys to true happiness and blessings. Earthly parents love to see their children enjoying things, from a baby’s delighted giggles to their adult child enjoying their pursuit of happiness with pure joy.
How much more so our Lord delights in us, His children, enjoying the life He is providing for us and His amazing creation all around. God surely does not want a bunch of “sad sack” Christians grimly going about life, oppressed with labor and fear. He lightens our load when we let Him. Jesus enjoyed the life and the people around Him, and yet He had more burdens than we can ever imagine. These He consistently took to His Father, as we need to do.
Everyone requires a balance of rest and relaxation in between our busy, more demanding and potentially stressful times—even our Lord did during His earthly ministry. We need to reserve some time for ourselves, not selfishly but out of necessary. Some of us need to learn to do nothing, what the Dutch call “nixson.” When we do not, our bodies often will do it for us, becoming unable to function through fatigue or illness.
When we love the Lord, our alone times of refreshing are often with Him, taking times of communion and conversation in His presence. Jesus said:
“One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, ‘Of all the commandments, which is the most important?’
‘The most important one,’ answered Jesus, ‘is this: Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.
The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” Mark 12:28-31 NIV
Without loving the Lord wholly, we cannot fulfil the second commandment Jesus told them: to love our neighbor as ourselves. We are to want the same things for our neighbor as we love to have for ourselves. But hear this: the Lord is also saying that it is okay to love ourselves as a balance for love of others. We are to treat others with compassion and respect while realizing that we, too, need that sort of attitude toward ourselves within our own hearts.
When no one else in our lives is providing that, God is always doing so. Sometimes the Lord must teach us how to be merciful with ourselves, how to relax and just be. We may continue to think we are honoring God in all we do—until we break down from the imbalance and get worn out. Paul encourages care of our Christian brothers and sisters while cautioning:
“Let’s not become discouraged in doing good, for in due time we will reap if we do not become weary. then, while we have opportunity, let’s do good to all people, and especially to those who are of the household of the faith.” Galatians 6:9 NIV
Good works are important, of course, yes, as they flow from the leading of God’s spirit rather than our own zeal. Those “have tos” that we take on may not be what God is leading us to do. Instead, they may be based on the fear of man, including our own inner critic. Teens are not the only ones who are vulnerable to peer pressure! There is considerable pressure from Christian peers who want us to be as busy as they are, particularly in upholding their works.
When God draws us into a time of solitude and outer inactivity, our Christian brothers and sisters sometimes start thinking we are backslid! This just exposes how little the Rest of God is understood. Yes, there are ups and downs in life. Wise believers sit with God, allowing Him to examine our heart motives as we review our commitments. There are times of rest, times of being drawn away with God alone.
Consider the balance of seasons and times revealed in Ecclesiastes:
“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted; a time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; a time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance;
a time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; a time to seek, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away; a time to tear, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; a time to love, and a time to hate; a time for war, and a time for peace.” Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 ESV
We see this ebb and flow, the balance in God’s creation all around us. The seasons change in God just as they do in the natural world. Only the holy spirit within us can reveal the seasons of our lives and what He would have us occupying ourselves with as we continue to walk in Him.
The Apostle Paul lived a full and busy life, led by God to accomplish much for God’s kingdom. Then his season of active travel in ministry ended. For the last two years of his life, he was imprisoned in Rome. What a change in his walk with God! We know he loved the brethren and more than once mentioned his longing to see the people of the churches he nurtured.
Paul could have railed against God that he could no longer go to the churches and minister in person. He could have complained that he was isolated, stuck in jail where he could not do for others as in the past. But when his in-person external ministry came to an end, there is no evidence that he had such an attitude of heart. He certainly did not write about any such struggle.
In truth, what Paul wrote in the two years he was imprisoned has marvelously lasted through the ages, gifting the rest of us his highest and greatest ministry, surely far beyond what Paul may have imagined at the time.
Liberty in Christ
Earlier, when ministering to the Corinthians about the sins of the body, particularly sexual immorality. Paul speaks of balance in this way:
“ All things are permitted for me, but not all things are of benefit. All things are permitted for me, but I will not be mastered by anything.” 1 Corinthians 6:12 NASB
Paul is saying he will not be dominated or compelled by anything–though lawful or acceptable— except for the Lord compelling him. He is not dominated by others’ demands for his life, his work, and his ministry. He is not bound by the Jewish laws concerning food or drink. He then continues to name sins of the flesh stemming from wrongful desires.
There is nothing inherently wrong with food or drink or sex or entertainment or our myriad present life blessings and advantages. God created many things to be enjoyed. But we, like Paul, should refuse to be under the authority of, out of balance with, any of these things. That is the way to be free in the Lord:
“For freedom Christ frees us! Stand firm, then, and be not again enthralled with the yoke of slavery." Galatians 5:1 Concordant Literal
Jesus was born of Mary into a human body that got weary. All the needs around Him drew consistently upon His compassion and tender mercies. Yet we have no example of the Lord using any means other than time alone with His Father to manage His burdens. He never asked His disciples to pray for Him because He was tired, sick, or, as we would say, burned out.
His human body did get fatigued from His busy ministry and the opposition he faced, but He went to the Father, not to activities. He also drew His closest followers away with Him to special times where He taught and fellowshipped just with them. When we are entering into His rest, God reveals all those other things we run to in order to distract us from our stressors, to attempt to find rest when we are distressed and lacking in peace.
Those of us in the Western world have an abundance of choices for enjoyment and distraction, each directing us to the world rather than to the Lord. Most of the world now has technology to advance their life and connection, but these too can be a snare. When other people and activities become our primary source of rest rather than Him, they become more important than God and His provision for peace and rest to our souls.
To what do we run to find rest? If it is other people or activities instead of God, or if we have to have everything for our loved ones in place before we can relax, we are falling short of God’s promise of rest in Him. When do we put our devices down and just be? We must examine anything that grows in significance, in time, thought, and energy, to begin dominating our time and focus instead of the Lord. Even when others we love take His place in our hearts, it is shown in what we habitually do.
It’s not that we must stop all such things or the connections they offer, but that we need to be led by the spirit in all. Many of these things are deceptive because they are not intrinsically bad things. Instead, they are at risk of being out of balance when used for the wrong purpose. We may even be focusing on others’ needs and others’ problems as a way to avoid our own. More than one of God’s servants called to minister to others is avoiding problems and issues in their own lives while devotedly ministering to those in their care.
Years ago, the Lord gave me a revealing dream. I was standing next to a fence separating two fields with flowers and weeds. I had my back to the field I was standing in while leaning over the fence, vigorously pulling weeds from the other field. Well. You do not have to be a prophet to understand that message! I was focusing on the weeds in another’s field while ignoring my own.
God always has ways to reveal the motives of our hearts! We need not continue with people or activities not motivated by Him. Sometimes He even takes others who are draining our time and energy from our lives, even our fellowships, though they may think it was their decision. Thankfully God takes us a step at a time, refining by the sharp sword of the word. He reveals by His spirit each person or thing that will rob us of God’s best.
It’s not sinful to have favorite hobbies like gardening, reading, watching shows or sports we love, participating in our child’s activities, enjoying concerts and other entertainment. Some people are like this, too—we can always count on them to distract us from ourselves. They bring joy and pleasure just being around them—they are a blessing! Despite all our challenges, this is an amazing world God has created for us to dwell within.
What we are dealing with here is what God reveals in our hearts. It’s an internal issue. God does all things purposefully. “Love the Lord your God with all your heart.” Are we dominated by, under the control of, or driven by anything other than the Lord? What do we love? Are any activities or people a substitute for God dealing with our fears and anxieties? God shows us so He can change us.
Jesus dealt with the motives of our hearts in what we do:
“Be careful not to perform your righteous acts before men to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven. So when you give to the needy, do not sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men. Truly I tell you, they already have their full reward.
But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. And your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you…Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles strive after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them.
But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Today has enough trouble of its own.” Matthew 6:1-4;31-34 Berean
Some of us just don’t know how to relax and must be taught. My wonderful husband started tellling me to relax so often that by time time our son was only three years old, he would tell me “Just rewax [relax}, Mom!” Tell me to do something and I’m on it but how do you do relax? It is easy to work too much when you love the work God has given to you. We can justify all the hours because, after all, it’s our calling.
It is expedient to learn to be more watchful about all those good things that hinder entering into His rest. Only He knows the progress made within. We are His workmanship, not our own.
“For it is by grace you have been saved through faith, and this not from yourselves; it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance as our way of life.” Ephesians 2:8-10 Berean
We can rest in knowing we are His job to fix! As God continues to refine us, we realize that some things we are doing, though harmless or even good things, are out of control. We humans are so vulnerable to pleasures that are initially acceptable but later begin to dominate us. That is what addiction starts out as being: a way to feel good, to escape pain and distress.
Many of us are vulnerable, over time, to get out of balance, becoming driven to overindulge in any good thing, including working for our living, exercising our bodies, being a loving parent and spouse, seeking external entertainment and escape, enjoying food and even fellowship to excess.
What do we live for? Is it God or is it something or someone else? All are gifts from God, to be sure. But many wonderful and lawful things still work death in us when they begin to control or dominate how we live. This is what Paul refused to allow. They become idols just as much as the golden calf of the Israelites. God can show each of us what is robbing us of the rest and peace we need.
We can learn to notice what brings peace or lack of it. What we see, watch, read about, and listen to—all that we take in and focus upon—will either nourish us or cost us, depending on what God knows is best for our individual needs. Our creator made us, and we are not all the same. What brings peace to one may be the very thing that adds to another’s stress.
Here’s an example of a good thing that can dominate us that most of us can relate to. If you use a smartphone, lay it down for a day. Try taking a smartphone vacation! It’s a good way to see how addictive that piece of wonderful equipment can be. How many of us reach for our smartphones upon waking, check our phones all day, and look at it as the last thing before we sleep?
While there are multiple benefits to having these devices, our work does not end if we taken them on vacation to stay in touch with work. Sadly, some positions and some businesses even require it. Think about when electric power is lost in our Western world. Nearly everything we might think of to pass the time we are unable to do. We can’t even charge our smartphones!
All around the world, smartphones have become vital for communication. They broaden our world, just as those of us who remember when TV’s first came into our households. Soon, however, we began to gather around the TV entertainment more than gathering with each other! Our devices are a wonderful gift when we need to stay in contact with family, friends, and work. They become vital in emergencies.
What a tool to keep track of our children, to make sure our loved ones who are traveling are safe on the road, to quickly communicate requests or needs, and—for those of us who are geographically challenged—to get us where we are going! In third-world countries without the infrastructure we have, many have smartphones to stay in touch. Smartphones all over are even recording wrongful acts to expose and correct, bringing about crucial changes that show evil in action and even result in a revolution of government.
I’m surely not saying smartphones are bad (except for unmonitored use by children who put themselves in danger because of the access others have to them). Who do you think gave individuals the ability to create such things? God wants us to be free as we enjoy His kingdom within. So, God has to deal with some of us to periodically detach from devices, to lay them down on occasion. Maybe we need to learn that the world can proceed without us being in touch for a period of time.
God may lead us to avoid some “good things” that are okay for others but put us at risk of imbalance. What starts as an enjoyable activity begins to consume us. Games and entertainment are a great way to distract ourselves and, for us seniors, to keep our brains active and alert. Yet it is easy to get “hooked,” where the activity is controlling us to an unhealthy degree.
Times of restoration are required for the fullness of life God wants us to have. God knows our frame and our individual weaknesses. He sees in our hearts where we lose our all things in moderation commitment to Him. Then we realize we are in the territory that Paul said not to allow. All things are lawful, but not all things are expedient. God strengthens us as we continue to refuse to be under the control of anything external.
We, the people of God, are to be only under subjection to the Lord. When God shows us something needs to stop or change, He enables us to do it.
“I can do all things [which He has called me to do] through Him who strengthens and empowers me [to fulfill His purpose—I am self-sufficient in Christ’s sufficiency; I am ready for anything and equal to anything through Him who infuses me with inner strength and confident peace.] “Philippians 4:13 Amplified
We need not make changes as a law for others to follow, nor even stop some things permanently. Some Christians enjoy social media while others stay away or limit involvement as it is neither expedient nor profitable for them. God knows when hobbies or habits lead to too much unproductive time being spent. He also knows the error comes in how we use these things, what we are routinely consuming from their content, rather than in those things themselves.
We must stay alert to be led by His spirit. When something that began as a pleasurable way of passing time and connecting with others starts to dominate the center of our being, God is no longer in it. The Lord is to be at the center of our being. We are His dwelling place and He is a jealous God. We may have seasons where God leaves certain areas alone until He decides it is time. It’s step-by-step as He exposes the layers of fleshly activities robbing us of His peace and His life.
After years of walking with the Lord, we become more and more aware of all the areas that draw us away from Him. Sometimes we need deep healing to mend the wounds, the past trauma that keeps us falling into the same old temptations. We sit at the feet of the Lord and learn moderation in the life He has given each of us.
And often, when we are at His feet, learning or resting, others who are busy resent it! They even accuse us of not being loving, not serving God. We may be judged for our outward inactivity and considered selfish and uncaring. After all, we are no longer helping them carry their heavy loads! Further, there are Christians who put off all of this inner change and the potential to be truly led by His spirit far into the future, reserving it for the afterlife.
These believers preach that we cannot enter into God’s rest until we die and are in heaven. Search the scriptures, however, and you will see it does not say that.
“Therefore, while the promise of entering His rest still stands, let us be careful that none of you be deemed to have fallen short of it. For we also received the good news just as they did; but the message they [the Israelites] heard was of no value to them, since they did not share the faith of those who comprehended it. Now we who have believed enter that rest…
there remains, then, a Sabbath rest for the people of God. For whoever enters God’s rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from His. Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest, so that no one will fall by following the same pattern of disobedience.” Hebrews 4:1-3; 9-11 NASB
The writer of Hebrews says now, in that day, it was disobedient to refuse to enter into His rest. It was available to them as they have faith in Jesus Christ. We are not told we have to physically die before entering into His rest. He is able to grant the peace that passes understanding while we remain on this earth. Isn’t it on this earth that we most need His rest?
His rest is much spoken of in the Word, but it seems there are many more sermons about what we should and should not do to fulfill the law. Rest is not something we can do, it is something God grants to us because of our faith. We need to know more about “making every effort” to enter into His rest. This is an attitude of our heart that only our Lord and Savior can work within us.
The Lord has led many of us to stop former activities, including some fellowships, doing good works, leading others to Christ, visibly helping the poor, or working for Christian causes like pro-life. It does not mean we do not share these values and beliefs, only that God is not leading us in particular to make any of these activities our focus. Jesus was not a “one issue “ God and neither are we to be unless God makes it our passion and cause.
God is in charge of our calling and we must fulfill it, but it is not God when we insist on others sharing our same passion for our pet issue or judge them as lacking when they do not. We should not insist that all other Christians prioritize what we do. Others may be called to do many specific things that God has not laid upon our hearts. It is not our calling.
Even our specific individual calling, when centered around one issue, should never come before our relationships with God Himself. We must heed the specific call of the spirit. While we are at rest, God is very active within us. He has our undivided attention when we are drawn to the wilderness, alone with God. What God is accomplishing within us isn’t seen by others during these times and seasons. We ourselves may not see or understand it.
The fruit of such times with only God, no distractions, later becomes evident, visible in our lives as righteousness. Much spiritual growth and maturity occur when God seemingly is doing nothing.
“The spiritual man judges all things, but he himself is not subject to anyone’s judgment. For who has known the mind of the Lord, so as to instruct Him? But we have the mind of Christ.” 1 Corinthians 2:15-16 Berean
The mind of Christ is within us—we have it. His mind is nurtured and fed by God within as we walk with the Lord. Those of us with busy, unruly minds are being taught of the spirit to allow the mind of Christ dwelling within us to dominate us. These are most precious times with our Lord. We learn to please God and not have fear of man in whatever He leads us to do.But even pleasing
God is not a restful pursuit if we are fear-based rather than faith-based. We are to fear, that is “be in awe or to reverence” God, which is in great contrast to the fear of punishment if we do not. Often there’s a deep-down fear of God’s judgment, of not being good enough for Him if we don’t do all we have been taught to do. This does not bring God’s rest—how can it?
“There is no fear in love [dread does not exist], but full-grown (complete, perfect) love turns fear out of doors and expels every trace of terror! For fear brings with it the thought of punishment, and [so] he who is afraid has not reached the full maturity of love [is not yet grown into love’s complete perfection].” 1 John 4:18 Amplified
Fear and faith do not go together, but we can state “what times I am afraid, I will trust the Lord.” God teaches us what pleases Him most as we learn to rest in Him. How He loves the praises of His people as He is teaching us His ways! There’s an old chorus we sing that expresses the desires of our heart at times like this: “Teach me, Oh, Lord, how to be pleasing. Teach me, Oh Lord, how to please you. In everything I say, in everything I do…”
Meetings and quiet time with God and service to others are not laws we must meet to qualify in God’s eyes. Freely we have received and freely we give, led by His spirit rather than rules and regulations. Fellowship with other Christians is precious and can be mighty refreshing when we are led to gatherings in Him. Otherwise, it becomes just another thing that is required of us.
Yes, we are directed not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together. The idea is to be led to be with others, joined in the spirit and gathering unto Him. When we gather out of fear, duty, or others’ expectations or even religious requirements, is it truly a blessing to God? Are we to go to every meeting, even when exhausted and resentful in heart? What might the Holy Spirit be leading us to do instead?
Some of us were raised to dutifully go to church every time the door was open. We raise our families in the same manner and it is wonderful training for a child. It does not bring peace and rest, however, if it is merely a religious activity, tradition, or habit, a “supposed to.” We love the genuine worship and honor of God with others but we do not have to gather with others to be with God. As a dear Christian friend once said to me, “Sometimes it is more holy to stay home and rest!”
Jesus only said and did what He saw the Father do. That’s how all the needs and demands presented to Him in His ministry were sorted out. Jesus did not address every need around Him. He certainly did not go to every gathering or activity others asked of Him. He had a social life with family and friends, enjoyed fellowship with His disciples, teaching some more deeply of His truths than others.
And He only took three to the Mount of Transformation:
“About eight days after these sayings, He took along Peter, John, and James, and went up on the mountain to pray. And while He was praying, the appearance of His face became different, and His clothing became white and gleaming. And behold, two men were talking with Him; and they were Moses and Elijah, who, appearing in glory, were speaking of His departure, which He was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.
Now Peter and his companions had been overcome with sleep; but when they were fully awake, they saw His glory and the two men who were standing with Him. And as these two men were leaving Him, Peter said to Jesus, ‘Master, it is good that we are here; and let’s make three tabernacles: one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah’—not realizing what he was saying.
But while he was saying this, a cloud formed and began to overshadow them; and they were afraid as they entered the cloud. And then a voice came from the cloud, saying, ‘This is My Son, My Chosen One; listen to Him!’
And when the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone. And they kept silent, and reported to no one in those days any of the things which they had seen.” Luke 9:28-36 NASB
We identify with Peter, who immediately wanted to do something for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah, but God’s voice stopped him. We do not know what the other disciples thought when these three only were taken by their Master to witness such an incredible thing. We do know, however, that servants of the Lord are capable of resenting others’ callings that appear greater, more honorable, privileged, or exciting than their own portion.
Some would push to hear all about it, even demand that they be included the next time a mountaintop opportunity arose. A few go so far as to insist we are all equal in our calling in the Body, that differences are unfair and bring inequalilty. That is not what the scriptures teach. We are to honor each other and our ministry, our service to God, recognizing that every part of the Body of Christ is needed in unique ways.
There are gifts differing, and a marvelous variety of callings that fit each of God’s own in a unique way but One Lord. Christians can confuse our different gifts and callings as evidence of being unequal, some better than while others are less than. We more easily recognize when someone has a calling we would never want to be our own. But does jealousy or resentment burn in our hearts when God chooses to elevate someone above what we have been given?
We know the disciples—at least some of them—fought for the highest place in the Lord, which only God could grant. Some fight for their place, to be accepted, and seen by others as equal to everyone else. Some who have been given very public gifts or ministries may forget this as well, taking honor and recognition as their due rather than remaining humble as a servant is to be.
Those who are insecure in their own spiritual place in the Lord are stung by this, when it is a matter of the other person’s heart, rather than the differences in calling and ministry. What a rest that would bring, to be led only by His spirit within us! We are not there yet, but we can have faith to pursue that prize, to enter into such rest as He has.
God is a changer of hearts. He invites us to be a part of showing forth His rest as He builds faith for it now. We rest in His hands as He does His work within and without. We are learning to be led only by His spirit:
“For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons and daughters of God. For you have not received a spirit of slavery leading to fear again, but you have received a spirit of adoption as sons and daughters by which we cry out, ‘Abba! Father!’” Romans 8:14-15 NASB
There is definitely a difference between slavery, which is bondage, and sonship, which brings freedom. Those called to sonship are sons and daughters of God, promised kingly authority as servant-priests to others. Such is the qualification for being overcoming sons and daughters of God, joined with Father God, led only by His spirit. Sons and daughters led by God come to God as our Father, not in the fear of a slave to a master.
It is the work of Jesus to bring us to the Father through Him. As we experience God as our Father, we learn to rest in Him. There is always more to learn about being led by the Lord in everything. Our Lord Jesus is the perfect model of a faithful and true Son. We read many times about how He sought time with His Father as He fulfilled His ministry. So we, too, seek time with God our Father.
Prayer is a conversation with God about any of our concerns. But we can even be burdened down and unfruitful in prayer when we haven’t been taught how to pray as led by the spirit. Without the spirit’s leading, prayer becomes automatic, repetitive, and perhaps even laborious. We sometimes fall asleep in the middle of it, too! Of course, we can bring any prayer or concern to Him, that’s not an issue.
But when we automatically pray for whatever someone asks us to pray for without godly discernment or for what makes sense in our own minds for the situation, it becomes unnecessary or even unproductive: “Pray for me to get this job. Pray that I will recover from this illness. Pray that God will give me a…(spouse, child, new house, prosperity, etc.” These are all good and needful things, worthy of intercession for others. God is absolutely able to do all of them and they are valid requests.
But what if God’s intent in the matter differs from the obvious need presented to us for intercession? The Lord does provide discernment about how to specifically pray to those who ask Him for it. Perhaps He leads us to pray that someone accepts their single status or waits longer before a job comes through. One time when interceding for another’s sorrow at their request, God clearly told me “I will heal their broken heart when it is given to me.” Well, I surely could not do that part for another!
As an intercessor, it is a work in progress to learn to pray according to His will. There are clearly some things we cannot do for another. God is the Master Healer of broken hearts, particularly when humans do the unspeakable to other humans. Regardless, each of us has to surrender our own hearts and our own will. We take our life of prayer and intercession to a higher level when we wait upon the Lord to pray according to His will.
It brings a rest when we know we are praying, in words or in spiritual utterances only understood by God. This is the way the Lord would have us pray and includes revealing issues in the heart in need of intercession. Prayer is not just a one-sided conversation of talking to God. It is also listening to Him. It takes time walking with the Lord to hear His voice, to converse with Him.
Sadly, a number of Christians don’t believe that God directly talks to anyone, that no one really hears the Lord talking to them in their inner being. They only know one-sided prayer requests. Yes, there are answers in the Word, as illuminated by His light of understanding. But there are also answers that rise up within us. There are answers about anything we need from the Lord to walk in His specific path of life for each of us. We can learn to be tuned to the right spiritual channel, to hear Him without the static of our soul.
Our thoughts, will and emotions cloud what God is telling us, but His still, small voice becomes more clear as we are trained to listen, to have ears to hear what the spirit is saying to us. When we are given discernment about how to pray for another, we have the precious privilege of praying for the root of the matter, whether the person for whom we’re interceding knows it or not.
God may direct us to keep that to ourselves, just like Peter, John, and James did, not discussing what they experienced with Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration. Early on, when ministering to others, God told me, “Don’t tell all you know.” Jesus surely did not. Some of us have lots of words, not all of which are edifying and in season !He was teaching me discernment about what to share and not share, when to use words and when to wait in silence. I am still learning that!
We can rest in the truth that God desires us to hear Him, or He would not have repeatedly told us to! The Lord can tune out all our fleshly static. He has a multitude of ways to bring His personal word to us. Saints testify of reading His word and the answer, the truth, the comfort, and the wisdom sought are right there, leaping out of the page. We may find ourselves singing a song in which we recognize an answer to our petitions.
And it is not always a spiritual song through which He speaks! During a very busy time early in my life, God brought this line from a song, “Stop and smell the roses…” and it was just what I needed. To the sincere and willing heart, He makes a way. We can trust that! He knows we need to get His wisdom and direction, so He responds but not always in the time frame we’d prefer.
Often the best answers require waiting on the Lord. We can wait in impatience, fear, or distress or in peace and gratitude that He will answer according to His will in Christ Jesus. As we walk and learn of our Lord daily, our relationship with Him, like with all those we love, deepens in understanding. He already understands all about us and loves us just the same.
Our Lord promises to reveal Himself to those who love Him. This is our greatest need, above all seeking Him in His kingdom of righteousness within. It’s what, long-ago, Mary was seeking at His feet. The Lord said to sit at His feet is the only true need, while Martha was busily worried about many things. It’s about the heart-to-heart relationship that the Father longs to have with His children, made possible by Jesus our Savior.
It is just like it is with humans we love. The more time we spend with someone we love, the more mutual understanding we gain. We rest ourselves in God while He does His work within us. He is our peace:
“But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have been brought near through the blood of Christ. For He Himself is our peace, who has made the two one and has torn down the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing in His flesh the law of commandments and decrees. He did this to create in Himself one new man out of the two, thus making peace.” Ephesians 3:14-16 Berean
God's Rest
Here we're exploring the spiritual concept of 'God's rest,' emphasizing the importance of faith and surrender to God's will over self-effort. The blog delves into biblical teachings, particularly from Hebrews, to illustrate how true rest involves ceasing our own works and relying on the Holy Spirit, leading to inner peace and spiritual maturity.
The Tree of Life is the pure God-life of the Lord Jesus Christ, made available to us through His sacrifice and resurrection. He’s in the midst of the garden of our hearts. He did it all and now draws us to walk in all He has done. We are no longer to eat from the Tree of Good and Evil as we have in former days. In the rest He brings, we know our good works, if done by us and not led by the Holy Spirit, are no more acceptable than the bad things that need to be purged.
We are learning how to enter into His promised rest for those with faith:
“We may be afraid, then, lest at some time, a promise being left of entering into His stopping, any of you may be seeming to be deficient…But the Word heard does not benefit those hearers, not having been blended together with faith in those who hear.
Then we who believe are entering into the stopping…For He who is entering into His stopping, he also stops from his works even as God from His own.” Hebrews 4:1-3;10 Concordant
The Concordant Literal version of the Bible calls God’s rest a “stopping.” Isn’t that beautiful? His rest is a stopping, a ceasing of our works and a surrender of faith in His work within us. In Hebrews 3, God chastises some for their stubbornness and idolatry. They continually strayed in their hearts, displaying unbelief. They could not enter into His rest in their present condition.
Stopping our own efforts to change ourselves and others is the key to entering into the rest promised for us here on this earth. We realize that we have nothing to offer to our God except faith. We become weary of soul-driven external works, visible to others but not prompted by the Holy Spirit. And it is not that His rest means doing nothing. We may do many things as they are led by God.
In His rest, we can do all things as He directs, with peace and joy, only motivated to please Him. Further on in Hebrews 4:
“Since, then, it remains for some to enter His rest, and since those who formerly heard the good news did not enter because of their disobedience, God again designated a certain day as '‘Today,’ when a long time later He spoke through David as was just stated:
‘Today if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts.’ For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken later about another day. There remains, then, a Sabbath rest for the people of God. For whoever enters God’s rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from His.
Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest, so that no one will fall by following the same pattern of disobedience.” Hebrews 4:6-11 Berean
When we are entering into His rest, He leads us to stop doing our own works. He teaches us to withdraw from unprofitable activities, including religious activities, that are pleasing others, believed and taught as necessary to earn our salvation. We walk away from all that is unprofitable for our maturity in Him. The truth is that we can do many things for Christ that do not nurture the Christ within us. When these things are done to please men, or to look outwardly religious, or out of fear rather than love, they keep us from the rest of God.
The word translated effort in the above passage is translated as “labour” in the King James Version. But that sounds like working at resting rather than resting in God’s work in us! It is useful to examine the Greek word labor in this passage, spoudazo, translated also “to use speed, be prompt or earnest, give diligence, or endeavor.” It comes from the root word spoude meaning “speed or eagerness.”
We are to endeavor to surrender our will and decisions to Him, to learn to stop our own planned activities, expectatons, rules, and ways we come up with to please the Lord, and be earnest about trusting ourselves to God. This understanding of effort or labour assures us that we are not told to work at resting! Rather, it is an eager, speedy focus to enter into His rest that we are to undertake with diligence. It is to be our priority, a goal to pursue promptly, something we’re eager in our hearts to obtain.
We fully realize that we are His project, as our own fruitless efforts to become righteous produce no fruit.
“For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.” Ephesians 2:10 ESV
God surely works to bring the unnecessary things that we do to an end. Our Lord strips us of all we do that is not motivated by His spirit. It is, in particular, a stopping of external religious deeds and actions that do not result in heart change. Our motives are no longer to do good works to be seen of others, because of Christian leaders and other believers’ expectations, to keep up with someone else, because of tradition, because we feel guilty or cannot say no, or just to keep ourselves busy.
All of this keeps us from having time to stop, to rest and grow within, to enjoy our God. As He continues to clear out our hearts, much of what we used to do for God, in the church realm particularly, fades away. This includes relationships that are not edifying as well as those activities with no spiritual gain. Some of our Christian brothers and sisters are unable to edify others due to their own conditions. God is in charge of our relationships and is careful, even protective, of His own.
Some relationships are just unprofitable, even spiritually draining. After a season, others become no longer mutually growth-producing in our spiritual walk. God changes how we spend our time with others, releasing us from relationships that are no longer a part of His plan for us. He leads us to examine our “have to’s,” the pressures and demands that others and ourselves put upon our lives. We are weaned away from external, flesh-driven work for God until, more and more, we can be at peace in the doing of only what He leads us to do.
Rather than a list of do’s and don’ts, we gradually lose our desire to do many things, as they are no longer of interest to us. Those we have been fellowshiping with may not understand that God has called us to walk together with others, to change in our Christian love and fellowship, even to walk alone with God for a season. It is hard to leave long-term relationships because God is leading us to do so, but not all Christian relationships or fellowships are eternal.
Entering into His stopping seems often to lead to walking alone with God, drawing from His spirit and learning of His ways to be written in our hearts. We fellowship with the saints as God leads, but we no longer seek Him primarily in great meetings or ministries, or through others. Our focus is on seeking times to be with God one-on-one. If God has called us into personal ministry or counseling, we need to be particularly wise about what we do and how we spend our time away from our calling.
Jesus had times of rest in His ministry, times where he enjoyed fellowship, and those precious hours He spent just with the Father. When our calling is to minister directly to others, demands and needs are endless. It may be zeal rather than the Spirit that is prompting such overactivity. Ministers and counselors can become so drained by carrying burdens, often more than God puts on them, that they neglect their own family relationships, health, and times of rest. A heart of compassion can lead ministry to overcommit and become worn out.
And who ministers to the ministers? To minister is to “serve” in both the Old Testament Hebrew and the New Testament Greek. These relationships where we are serving each other are most precious, yet there are also people who are leeches that suck the lifeblood from Christian fellowships and leaders. These are believers who remain dependent long after they should have some maturity of their own.
Some of us are too helpful, continually offering assistance regardless of need. We create dependence when we do something for others that they are actually able to do for themselves. The Apostle Paul calls these Christians babes in Christ.
“Brothers, I could not address you as spiritual, but as worldly—as infants in Christ. I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for solid food. In fact, you are still not ready, for you are still worldly. For since there is jealousy and dissension among you, are you not worldly? Are you not walking in the way of man?” 1 Corinthians 3:1-3 Berean
Fleshly jealousy and division, conflicts about who does what, who leads or follows, these are worldly, childish things that drain the spirit. Paul had to deal with these things with the Corinthians rather than ministering a deeper word to them as he desired to do. They still needed the basics of how to behave as loving brothers and sisters in Christ. This was still the milk of the word when they should have been ready for the meat of deeper things for spiritual growth.
It’s obvious what a newborn baby can do for themselves—nothing! But it is less obvious when newborn babies in Christ begin to grow and need to do more in their own walk with God rather than always seeking others out to minister to them. Some believers always have a problem, an issue, an offense, a trial, that they need others to attend to for them. Some Christian leadership may even prefer keeping their followers dependent upon them and their ministry rather than enabling their growth in their own personal relationship with God.
Neither the one who remains dependent nor the one who fosters such dependency can enter into the rest of God. Paul knew the Corinthian believers needed to grow up. He had not been able to minister more than the beginning milk of the word because of their immaturity and carnality. These babes in Christ remained immature in their hearts, not growing up into the character of Christ over time.
Newborn babies are very needy—for a time. New Christians start as babes, needing nourishment to build their foundation in Christ, but babes continue to have needs that they cannot meet, so they turn to others to meet them. New Christians are to grow up into Him. Those who refuse to grow not only limit themselves but also those who minister to them.
“Rid yourselves, therefore, of all malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander. Like newborn babies, crave pure spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation.” 1 Peter 2:2 Berean
The milk of the word deals with these fundamental sinful attitudes of the heart. How many of us mature Christians would be offended to be considered babes because of malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy and slander? It takes the maturing towards the character and heart of Christ formed within for changes in our spiritual walk. If you are not seeing changes within, if your walk remains the same as it was in prior times, you need to get closer to God!
The Israelites had a lack of faith so they could not enter in to rest during their era. We, too, cannot enter in if we have unbelief in what God has said. We continue being carnal when we harbor envy and strife, causing division among the brethren. We are not and cannot be at rest when such fleshly things are working in our hearts. Rest in the Lord is impossible as long as we are preserving self-focused motivations such as pride, envy, and self-justification.
Envy, strife, and division are natural and common to man but Christ is not divided. God hates when anyone works division and strife among the brethren. It’s in God’s list of the 7 things He hates:
“There are six things that the Lord hates, seven that are detestable to Him: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked schemes, feet that run swiftly to evil, a false witness who gives false testimony, and one who stirs up discord among brothers.” Proverbs 6:16-18 Berean
All of these characteristics are motives of the heart that God hates, signs of immaturity from failure to grow up into the love of God. There is no division in love, agape love that is God’s nature. Mature Christians edify others, not tear down, gossip about, or stir up discord and strife among them. We are to be a peculiar, special people showing forth the love of God. That is something we can only do through resting in God’s provision for us, accessing all that Jesus died for so that we can truly live in Him.
It is also challenging for those of us who love our Lord so much to allow God to strip us of activities that are not expedient for us or our spiritual growth. We so much want to do something for God, to show Him how much we love Him. Of course, we want to spread the good word of the gospel to others so they will love Him, too. Yet we tend to focus on doing when we need to focus on being. There is no rest in imbalance in our daily lives that are so full of the activities for God that we have no time to be with the Lord, enjoying fellowship with Him!
How does God teach us a balance in what He calls us to do? Though the word balance is not in the Bible, all of God’s creation shows forth the perfect balance of His creative nature. God is a perfect balance of mercy and justice. All of the characteristics of our Lord are in beautiful harmony with each other. What God made, His creation, was in perfect balance until the world’s growing population and careless stewardship of the earth began to unbalance the natural order He so beautifully established in this world He created for us.
Watch any flora and fauna nature documentary and you see the exquisite balance of nature that God created and the natural world maintains—when allowed to do so. We ignorant humans have routinely and repeatedly disrupted this balance. With all the changes man brings to this world, present disruptions are even more rapid and are becomeing increasingly deadly, not just to plants and animals but to humans.
We are learning the hard lesson that we can’t just wipe out parts of God’s creation without harming His balance, bringing severe, though usually unintended, consequences.
“But ask the animals, and they will teach you, or the birds in the sky, and they will tell you; or speak to the earth, and it will teach you, or let the fish in the sea inform you. Which of all these does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this?
In His hand is the life of every creature and the breath of all mankind.” Job 12:7-10 NIV
Nature, including human nature, is designed to seek a balance. All systems seek this balance, called homeostasis. Homeostasis is the self-regulating process where we always seek a stable state when adjusting to varying external conditions. Gravity illustrates this. Put a straw on an unstable surface and watch it try to balance itself. Homeostasis is a natural state that all systems seek according to God’s design.
It’s part of why we get stuck in old ways. They have become our natural, familiar state. After a disruption for whatever reason, it takes a while to find a new homeostasis, to be balanced again. When we begin to change—or change comes upon us— our balance or homeostasis, our familiar comfort zone, is unstable until we find balance in the new. Every couple ever joined goes through this process of individual to relationship stability. Every person experiences life’s endings and losses that disrupt the way we’ve come to live our lives.
Balance brings harmony, built into all biological systems, including humans. It takes much wisdom and commitment to learn ways we can coexist with each other over time. As shown so powerfully in nature, we have to learn to balance human needs with other forms of life in our ever-expanding world population, enabling all to make a living for their families along with the requirements for nature to thrive.
God is able to provide wisdom and balance in even these circumstances. Whether God is always credited with these solutions, He always makes a way of escape!
“The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of people, who suppress the truth by their wickedness since what may be known about God is plain to them because God has made it plain to them.
For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.” Romans 1:18-20 NIV
God has shown Himself to humans since the creation of the world. Though He is invisible, His qualities are seen in what He has created. Our God is a Lord of balance and of contrasts. In the Bible, one way that God talks about balance is by using the word moderation. Moderation is defined as “temperance; the act of imposing due restraint, calmness of mind, equanimity.” Moderation is used regarding Christian behavior in several translations of Philippians 4:5:
“Let your moderation be known unto all men. The Lord is at hand. Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.
And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.” Philippians 4;5-7 KJV
In this scripture, the word moderation is also translated as “lenience” (Concordant), “gentleness” (NIV), and “forbearing spirit” (NASB and Amplified). These words may not seem to connect directly with a balance to bring the rest we are endeavoring to understand. But look at the words that follow in the scripture. This moderation in all things brings peace and rest. And rest is a keeper, going far beyond our natural understanding.
We are made to be in balance, fully equipped to learn to enter into His rest. In fact, we can be at rest when there is no earthly reason to be! God’s peace and rest follow moderation, not because of what we do but how and why we do it. It is our heart’s motives that require examination. It can be a shock to some of us Christians when we realize how much we have done that wasn’t God’s idea!
Sometimes such actions are not blessed with successful outcomes, making it obvious whose idea it was. Other times, we may dutifully continue to do things that God is no longer leading us to do, with others benefitting though it is costing us true rest. Other people, and even ministries, greatly appreciate our good works, benefitting them and their works. The more programs and activities a church has, the better reputation it garners.
And we, too, appear blessed in others’ eyes, looking holy and righteous. After all, these are good works, not bad things. Others will allow us keep doing good works if it benefits them. They also may be the first to judge us severely when we stop. More than one Christian entering into God’s rest gets accused of being selfish or backslidden when we are no longer performing like others think we should or we’ve taught them to expect of us.
These same good works, however, can exhaust and drain us in ways God never intended. And it may be those who most need to enter into God’s rest that get the most disturbed! We can resent the peace and rest, the balance that others have achieved when we don’t have it. We see how the other person is not working nearly as hard or as often as we are in their walk with the Lord. They are enjoying their life balance while we are slaving away at what God has called us to do.
We are so often the Marthas of the world, when the Lord is drawing us to be Marys, those who sit at His feet:
“As they traveled along, Jesus entered a village where a woman named Martha welcomed Him into her home. She had a sister named Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet listening to His message. But Martha was distracted by all the preparations to be made. She came to Jesus and said, ‘Lord, do You not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her to help me!’
‘Martha, Martha,’ the Lord replied, ‘you are worried and upset about many things. But only one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, and it will not be taken away from her.’” Luke 10:38-42 Berean
Jesus was clear about what was important, and it surely was not all the fussing and planning Martha had allowed to distress her. Well, you might say, someone has to do it! Yes, but God is able to teach us what is important when. We may need to learn to be at rest when there is still much to be done. It may not occur to us to learn from others who are examples, like Mary, prioritizing those times at Jesus’ feet.
Not everyone was raised to “do, do, do” as some of us were. We truly can learn from others who show a balanced life we have yet to establish in our Christian walk. God plants the idea for many good things, that’s not debatable. But we are cautioned even then to have a balance. The question: Is what you are doing motivated by your flesh or God’s spirit?
“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desires of the flesh.” Galatians 5:16 NASB
So we ask: “Lord, teach us to live today in this world. Give us our daily bread and show us the path of life for each of us day by day as your Spirit leads.” The hours a person works are not the key to how stressful that work is for them. It is the attitudes and motives of the heart that wear us out! If we are driven to help others, to “do for God,” have many friends, make money, achieve outward evidence of success, have a “need to be needed,” desire time for vacations and entertainment, etc., etc., there is the source of our stress!
These are all good things, but if we have resentful attitudes about work, like Martha did, frustration with colleagues who are not doing their part, resentment towards brothers and sisters in Christ who don’t pitch in to help, we need to change our attitudes, if not our circumstances. We may be truly doing what God has led us to be involved in, called us to do but the motives, the frequency, the burden of it all must change.
We require a heart change before we are able to enter into His rest in the doing of His will. We must do what we are called to do, that is certain. But we are not to be overburdened in the doing of it. God is able to show us how to be in the world but not of the world, even when we are unable to separate from others and their activities. When we walk fully in God’s will for us, we learn to rest in Him doing it from within by the Holy Spirit.
Those in religious vocations that call for separation from the world still must deal with what is in their own hearts. When they live in groups of believers who are called to detach from the outer world, they still have to deal with relationships impacting their peaceful lives. They may have let go of much of those outer things that distract others, but God still needs to claim their inner land.
It is not the outward separation from the world but rather the inner separation of our hearts from carnal thoughts and behaviors, to which God is drawing us. God changes outward activities, including enjoyable activities that distract from our spiritual growth, as He is always prioritizing the heart. But if we are giving up things for God but still want to do them, it’s a beginning but not a fullness of His rest.
This is will worship rather than surrender. Isn’t it wonderful that God can truly change the desires of our hearts, so there’s no desire to do those former things God is eliminating from our lives. When they are purged from our hearts, we do not miss them. We are dead to them. We learn how much is enough, a balance of serving from the place of rest God creates within us.
Another source of stress and unrest we humans battle is trying to control the uncontrollable, particularly challenging for Christians who are perfectionists. God creates some of His own with a strong focus on wanting things to be right. God deals with our imperfect world and is in ultimate control of it all, but oh, my, consider all the out-of-control things He sees going on in this world! We all spend far too much time worrying about things we can’t control, which includes other people as well as the future.
God nonetheless remains true to his perfect and right(eous) standard, resting in the plan that He began at the foundation of the world. God knows that what He wills, will happen. He knows our frame and loves the perfectionist, making use, in balance, of this characteristic. Perfectionists are often the ones who hold up God’s standard of righteousness and truth for the rest of us. But life can be difficult for them as well as for others around them, as no one is perfect but the Lord.
We are enabled to learn to rest in God’s ultimate plan, trusting in faith that everything will work out right regardless of our attempts to control the outcome. The Lord tells us in Matthew 6:34:
“Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.” Matthew 6:34 KJV
He is reminding us that we can only handle today. Really that is all we ever have. The troubles of tomorrow are not to weigh us down today. That’s the only way His yoke is easy and His burden is light– by not carrying yesterday’s or tomorrow’s burdens today. This is most difficult for many of us. Nonetheless, it is a key part of entering into His rest.
We do have to consider the future when we make necessary plans. We need to learn from the past when we move into the present. But, we are not to dwell upon or ruminate about the past nor about the future. We are to forget the past because it is dead and gone, and the future is yet to come. Here’s a chorus that expresses this beautifully:
Yesterday is yesterday, the past is dead and gone.
Yesterday is yesterday, you know you’re not alone.
You let the love of Jesus come into your heart.
You let the love of Jesus give new life a start.
(Author unknown)
We let, and He brings His new spiritual life to us. Whatever He directs, He also enables us to do. Faith in this truth brings about rest. Some of us know quite well how to work at things. We’ve been raised to be this way and know how to work long and hard. But when God knocks on our spiritual door to be let in, guiding us to a stopping, we are clueless! When God tells us just to relax, we may cry out, as I did; “But I don’t know how!”
We don’t know how to practice mindfulness, a practice that teaches how to stay in the present, to focus on the moment. So many precious moments slip through our hands when we are stuck in the past or worrying about the future. Thankfully, our God is the best mindfulness teacher there is! God teaches us how to live in the present, in balance, while doing our required and necessary planning and preparation for tomorrow. We roll our cares upon Him because He cares for us.
When we slow down, we begin to notice the beauty around us, all the multitude of little daily gifts and provisions that God has given. Our slower pace of living allows a growth of thanksgiving and gratitude. In godliness and contentment, there is great gain! It is easier for us who are privileged to have our basic needs met than for those who must work day and night to survive and provide for their families. Yet there are cultures who live very simply, with great happiness, without all the things we consider essential
We all must learn to recognize what only God’s mighty hand can do.
“Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, so that in due time He may exalt you. Cast all your anxiety on Him, because He cares for you.” 1 Peter 5:7 Berean
We may not think we are being proud and arrogant when we continue to do, do, do, or try to control things that only God can, but here it is. We are to humble ourselves under His mighty hand, recognizing that not one of us is essential to God. He is essential to us. We have no life without Him. He created us to be in relationship with Him. He not only loves us, He likes us!
It is His good pleasure to give us the Kingdom, but it still belongs to Him and He is to be our center. We can cast all that is weighing us down upon Him, because He loves us. We are His and we do not belong to ourselves. Rest is not “working at getting rid of,” “trying to die to..” or “dying to self.” Rest is a ceasing of labor, an inner quality that is present regardless of life’s demands. God knows our differing circumstances.
Have you ever admired the rest, peace, and joy that some parents raising a large family display? They show God’s rest in a way that those of us with one precious child may never exhibit! The person who spends hours and hours at the work God has given them in peace and joy, knowing they are in the center of His will, is more at rest than the person who spends less time but is always troubled in the doing of it.
It is not these external demands, the circumstances of our lives, nor the expectations of others. It is the attitudes within that bring rest or robs us of it. God’s changes written within our hearts are lasting, unlike the present circumstances of our differing lives. God is so faithful to us! He is able to lead all into the rest that He has promised for those who love Him.
The tests may be different but the lessons are the same. He brings a peace that is inside, becoming unshakable within us. This peace and rest is far beyond what humans can explain because it is a work of God. His peace guards our hearts and minds, far beyond and transcending any human understanding and explanation for it. These are the circumstances in which Christians shine forth with the fruit of the spirit, the peace, love and joy that brings rest to our souls—and yes, even to our bodies!
Others who do not know or serve God just don’t get why we are not frantic or upset when trouble surrounds us. There can be a storm, a whirlwind or tornado in our midst, all around us, yet we are in the center with God while He holds the storm back from us. This stems from surrender to God in all that is allowed to come into our lives. We can bring anything and everything to our Lord, running to Him in thanksgiving and praise as we ask for what is needed. He then reassures our hearts of His faithfulness and love for His own.
“Do not be anxious or worried about anything, but in everything [every circumstance and situation] by prayer and petition with thanksgiving, continue to make your [specific] requests known to God.
And the peace of God [that peace which reassures the heart, that peace] which transcends all understanding, [that peace which] stands guard over your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus [is yours].” Philippians 4:7 Amplified
As we rest in Him, the Lord increases within us until it is an overflow of Him swallowing up death in life. God is teaching His people in this hour to come to rest in Him. Do you hear His invitation to the promise of entering in to His rest? We can learn how to live in it, day by day, as we walk hand in hand with our Lord.